American Council on Science and Health American Council on Science and Health
About
ACSH
¥ Contact
ACSH
¥ Support
ACSH
¥ My
ACSH
¥ Advanced
Search
 
ACSH.org   Home   . .   Health Issues   . .   News Center   . .   Publications   . .   Events   . .   FactsAndFears   .  

Health Facts And Fears

Archives >

Printer Format icon Printer Format
E-mail Information icon E-mail Information
December 14, 2004

On, Dasher! On, Designated Driver!

By Howard Forman

Now, I do not want to sound like everyone's mother, but let's face it, a lot of what Mom taught us was true.   

In that spirit, I would like to remind everyone of a proven and socially acceptable method for getting through the holiday season free of tragedies resulting from drunk driving.  Designating a driver before you head out for holiday celebrations or meals with your family is a great method for making sure everyone gets home safe.  To quote the website of internationally-renowned alcohol expert Dr. David J. Hanson:

Designated drivers have probably saved nearly 50,000 lives and spared many more thousands of people from suffering injury from drunk driving.  Over nine out of ten Americans who attend social events where alcohol is served would like to see designated drivers used.  And the proportion of people using or being a designated driver has increased dramatically over time.  Each year over 73,000,000 Americans either serve as a designated driver or are driven home by one.  A designated driver is simply a person who agrees to abstain from alcohol and be responsible for driving others home. The others are free to drink or not as they choose.

Your friends and family can get together and make a schedule for who will be the designated driver at each get-together so that there is no single person who has to go ad infinitum without experiencing the cardio-protective health effects of moderate alcohol consumption.  If you are planning a get-together, you can show your sincere hospitality by pre-arranging for people to serve as designated drivers, and be sure to offer a toast or even a small gift to those who choose to serve this vital role.

There are benefits to the designated driver system besides getting home safe:

--Rather than breaking out complex mathematical charts (which can be logistically difficult at a table filled with holiday food) showing your body's ability to metabolize alcohol and the time until you will be driving home, you can relax and enjoy your beverage of choice free of this concern.

--If you are a parent, you are setting a good example for your kids when you designate a driver -- you send them the message that while it is all right for adults to consume alcohol, it is unacceptable for anyone to get behind the wheel after doing so.

--You might have friends who for their own reasons choose not to drink.  If given the opportunity to serve as designated driver, they may be elevated from the unfair position of social outcast to real live hero. 

This holiday season remember that there is no type of alcoholic beverage that is safe to take behind the wheel with you.  Respect the power of what you drink whether it is brewed, distilled, or fermented.  Drink in moderation, and when you choose to drink outside your home, please designate a driver.

Throughout this holiday season and beyond, let's eat, drink, designate a driver, and be merry.

Howard Forman is President of Doctors for Designated Driving, the voice of health professionals fighting drunk driving.  You can add your voice to the cause by visiting http://www.dfdd.org and going to the Get Involved Section.

 


Drawing of Todd Seavey


About the Editor:
Todd Seavey

is Director of Publications at ACSH and edits FactsAndFears.  His opinions are not necessarily ACSH's.

He can be reached at seavey [at] acsh.org.

Subscribe to ACSH.org RSS  FactsAndFears posts on YOUR site
Search Archives Icon for Search
Search

Icon for Browse Archives Browse Archives

Sign In Icon for Sign In

Username:

Password:

Sign In Now >>

Forget your password?

Register

Why register with ACSH?
You'll be able to:
¥ Post comments to articles
¥ Subscribe to e-bulletin
¥ Receive immediate or scheduled updates


Register Now >>

¥ (from ACSH) theScooponSmoking.org
¥ aBetterEarth.org
¥ AgBioWorld
¥ American Justice Partnership
¥ Anti-Quackery and Science Blog
¥ Anti-Quackery Ring
¥ BiomonitoringInfo.org
¥ Blogborygmi.com (Nick Gene & co.)
¥ CalorieLab
¥ The Cancer Blog
¥ CAST on transgenic animals
¥ Catallarchy (econ, etc.)
¥ Competitive Enterprise Institute
¥ ConsumerFreedom.com
¥ Debunkers.org
¥ Diet-Blog.com
¥ Dynamist/Virginia Postrel
¥ Fishscam
¥ Freakonomics
¥ GruntDoc
¥ Health Beat (medical news/research)
¥ Health Business Blog
¥ Health Intelligence Network blog
¥ In the Pipeline (drugs per Derek Lowe)
¥ Infography on Medical Care: Quacks, Quackery
¥ Institute of Ideas
¥ JunkScience.com (Steve Milloy)
¥ MedMusings
¥ National Council Against Health Fraud
¥ Overlawyered.com
¥ ParkinsonsHealth
¥ Quackbusters
¥ Quackfiles
¥ Quackfiles.blogspot.com
¥ Quackwatch
¥ James Randi, ultimate skeptic
¥ Rangel, M.D.
¥ Reason (including Seavey pieces)
¥ SAGEcrossroads.net (aging)
¥ Scientific Review of Alternative Medicine
¥ Science Media Centre
¥ Sense About Science
¥ Skeptic Magazine
¥ Skeptic Ring
¥ Skeptical Inquirer/CSICOP
¥ Spiked-Online
¥ TCS Daily (Europe)
¥ TCS Daily (U.S.)
¥ 3 Billion and Counting (malaria docu. w/Ross)
¥ Tobacco Survivors United
¥ TobaccoAnalysis blog
¥ Urban Legends per Snopes
¥ US News Best Health Heart Center
¥ US News Lung Cancer Center
¥ Volokh.com (blog on law, econ, polisci)
¥ Washington Legal Foundation
¥ WhyBiotech (Council for Biotechnology Info.)
¥ WhyQuit.com (case studies, message boards, etc.)
¥ Dr. Carl Winter (health song-parodies)
¥ aWorldConnected.org (benefits of globalization)


TO VIEW AND MAKE COMMENTS ON THE ARTICLES ABOVE (OR OTHERS), "SIGN IN" AT THE RIGHT MARGIN.

AMERICAN COUNCIL ON SCIENCE AND HEALTH  |  1995 BROADWAY, 2ND FLOOR, NEW YORK, NY 10023-5860
TELEPHONE: (212) 362-7044  |  FAX: (212) 362-4919  |  E-MAIL: GEN. ORGANIZATION MAILBOX: acsh (at) acsh.org; IND. STAFFER: [last name or last name followed by first initial]@acsh.org 

Copyright © 1997-2004 American Council on Science and Health  |  Privacy Policy  |  All Rights Reserved
.

Founded in 1978, ACSH is a consumer advocacy organization directed and advised by over 350 physicians, scientists and policy advisors. ACSH promotes the use of sound, peer-reviewed science in the formation of a full  spectrum of  public health policies, including those related to food, pharmaceuticals, environmental chemicals, lifestyle factors, consumer products and terrorism preparedness and response.