Tag: preventing drunk driving

  • Alcohol Detection Devices May Soon Become Mainstream

    Alcohol Detection Devices May Soon Become Mainstream

    The Driver Alcohol Detection System for Safety could be ready for commercial use as soon as next year.

    A device now used only for those convicted of driving under the influence may soon become a universal piece of equipment in vehicles. 

    According to the Washington Post, government-funded researchers have been working on an ignition interlock for the past 10 years. The device would require drivers to measure their blood alcohol level before starting their vehicle and would prevent them from doing so if over the legal limit.  

    The device, dubbed the Driver Alcohol Detection System for Safety (DADSS), would measure a driver’s BAC in two ways: one would be breath-based (and would not require a mouthpiece), while the other would be touch-based. The most important features of the device, according to officials on the project, is that it be “fast, precise and just about perfectly reliable in many different driving conditions,” as well as cheat-proof. 

    Robert Strassburger serves as president and chief executive of Automotive Coalition for Traffic Safety, which is part of the DADSS initiative. He tells the Post that while similar devices already exist, they simply aren’t up to the necessary standards. 

    “They are very difficult to use—they require that you provide a very large volume of breath from the very depths of your lungs,” he said. “Even people who use them regularly and are experienced in using them typically fail to provide a sufficient breath sample about 30% of the time.”

    Strassburger tells the Post that one of the most vital aspects of the device development is determining how humans process alcohol. 

    “That is one of the most significant challenges facing us in the development of this technology: How we, as individuals, absorb and eliminate alcohol is a function of our gender, our ethnicity, underlying health problems, [and] what we might be doing before or after we’ve consumed alcohol. All of that we have to understand,” he said.

    Strassburger states that the breath-based measurement would be done without a mouthpiece and would simply entail breathing from the driver’s seat. The touch-based system would work a bit differently.

    “If you’ve ever been to the doctor or the hospital and they clip that thing on the end of your finger that measures your pulse and the oxygen content of your blood, that’s a similar kind of concept,” he said. “We’re looking below the surface of the skin at your capillary bed and measuring how much alcohol is in your blood that way.”

    According to Strassburger, researchers are still working on a way to ensure that the breath or touch would be coming only from the driver and no one else. 

    If successful, experts predict the new devices could prevent 10,000 deaths annually. The device could be ready for commercial use as soon as next year.

    Last year, Virginia’s Department of Motor Vehicles utilized the device, and it’s also being road-tested currently at James River Transportation, a private company in Virginia.

    View the original article at thefix.com

  • Sober Steering Wheel Could Save Lives

    Sober Steering Wheel Could Save Lives

    “My goal is for Sober Touch to go global and save lives all around the world,” said the device’s creator Lakesha Stines.

    Lakesha Stines was a child when a close family friend who was nine months pregnant was killed by a drunk driver. 

    “I was only 10 years old when it happened,” Stines told the New Haven Register. “This had a great impact on my life to see her and her baby lying in that casket at such a young age.”

    Decades later, Stines, now 42, has invented a product that she hopes will spare other families the same tragedy—the “Sober Touch Sensoring” steering wheel, which can detect alcohol in a person’s sweat. 

    According to Stines, the product will prevent drunk driving. When a person touches the wheel, the sensors read whether there is alcohol present in their sweat. The car will not start if a driver has alcohol levels that are over the legal limit. 

    “When you get in your car and you touch those sensors after drinking, it’s going to calculate your blood alcohol level through the perspiration in the palms of your hands,” Stines told WTNH News 8. 

    Stines has high hopes for the product. “My goal is for Sober Touch to go global and save lives all around the world.”

    According to Mothers Against Drunk Driving (MADD), about 30 people are killed each day by drunk drivers. Bob Garguilo, executive director of MADD in Connecticut, where Stines lives, says that the steering wheel could help reduce that number. 

    He said, “A device requiring a driver to prove they are sober before their car will start will save lives.”

    It could be an important tool for advancing toward MADD’s ultimate mission of eliminating deaths caused by drunk driving. “MADD’s Campaign to Eliminate Drunk Driving was created so that one day there will be no more victims,” Garguilo said. 

    Stines says that the steering wheel will cost as little as $400, and could be available to be in cars by the end of the year. It’s not clear whether she envisions it in all cars or used by people who have previously been caught driving drunk—some of whom are required by court mandate to have a breathalyzer installed in their vehicles. 

    Stines has received recognition from local elected officials and also people in the industry who can help her bring the steering wheel to fruition. 

    She said, “People have been taking me to the next level—taking me to where I need to be because they believe in what I’m doing.”

    Most importantly, she feels that her dear family friend is looking out for the project. 

    “I know she’s so excited in spirit about what I’m doing and I know she’s smiling, I know she’s like, ‘Go get ‘em.’”

    View the original article at thefix.com