ABSTRACT. Objective: The purpose of this study was to identify the extent to which 10th-grade substance use and parenting practices predicted 11th-grade teenage driving while alcohol-/other drug-impaired (DWI) and riding with alcohol-/other drug-impaired drivers (RWI). Method: The data were from Waves 1 and 2 of the NEXT Generation study, with longitudinal assessment of a nationally representative sample of 10th graders starting in [2009][2010]. Multivariate logistic regression analysis was used to examine the prospective associations between proposed predictors (heavy episodic drinking, illicit drug use, parental monitoring knowledge and control) in Wave 1 and DWI/RWI. Results: Heavy episodic drinking at Wave 1 predicted Wave 2 DWI (odds ratio [OR] = 3.73, p < .001) and RWI (OR = 3.92, p < .001) after controlling for parenting practices and selected covariates. Father's monitoring knowledge predicted lower DWI prevalence at Wave 2 when controlling for covariates and teenage substance use (OR = 0.66, p < .001). In contrast, mother's monitoring knowledge predicted lower RWI prevalence at Wave 2 when controlling for covariates only (OR = 0.67, p < .05), but the effect was reduced to nonsignifi cance when controlling for teen substance use. Conclusions: Heavy episodic drinking predicted DWI and RWI. In addition, parental monitoring knowledge, particularly by fathers, was protective against DWI, independent of the effect of substance use. This suggests that the enhancement of parenting practices could potentially discourage adolescent DWI. The fi ndings suggest that the parenting practices of fathers and mothers may have differential effects on adolescent impaired-driving behaviors. (J. Stud. Alcohol Drugs, 75, 5-15, 2014) Safety, 2010). Around the same time adolescents begin driving, the prevalence of substance use increases in this population (CDC, 2012), potentially increasing crash risk.
Alcohol-/other drug-related crash riskA substantial body of research (Elvik, 2013;Li et al., 2012) has established that an elevated crash risk results at all ages from impaired driving caused by alcohol (Blomberg et al., 2009), other drugs (Elvik, 2013Li et al., 2012), or alcohol and other drugs used in combination (Kuypers et al., 2012). For example, drivers younger than 21 with a positive blood alcohol concentration experienced twice the crash risk of those ages 25 and older (Peck et al., 2008). Novice teen drivers have especially high crash rates because of inexperience, contributing to the disproportionate effect on this population of driving while impaired by alcohol and/or other drugs (DWI; Peck et al., 2008;Voas et al., 2012).Current national prevalence estimates of teenage drinking and driving in the past month among 11th-grade students range from 9.1% (CDC, 2012) to 12.5% (Li et al., 2013), and two national studies found that 24% of high school students report riding with an impaired driver (RWI) in the past month (CDC, 2012) or in the past year (Li et al., 2013). The National Roadside Survey conducted for the N...