Nelofar Kureshi

Health Data Scientist



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Nelofar Kureshi



Dalhousie University




Nelofar Kureshi

Health Data Scientist



Dalhousie University



Alcohol is a risk factor for helmet non-use and fatalities in off-road vehicle and motorcycle crashes


Journal article


Nelofar Kureshi, S. Walling, Mete Erdogan, Izabella Opra, Robert S. Green, David B. Clarke
European Journal of Trauma and Emergency Surgery, 2024

Semantic Scholar DOI PubMed
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APA   Click to copy
Kureshi, N., Walling, S., Erdogan, M., Opra, I., Green, R. S., & Clarke, D. B. (2024). Alcohol is a risk factor for helmet non-use and fatalities in off-road vehicle and motorcycle crashes. European Journal of Trauma and Emergency Surgery.


Chicago/Turabian   Click to copy
Kureshi, Nelofar, S. Walling, Mete Erdogan, Izabella Opra, Robert S. Green, and David B. Clarke. “Alcohol Is a Risk Factor for Helmet Non-Use and Fatalities in off-Road Vehicle and Motorcycle Crashes.” European Journal of Trauma and Emergency Surgery (2024).


MLA   Click to copy
Kureshi, Nelofar, et al. “Alcohol Is a Risk Factor for Helmet Non-Use and Fatalities in off-Road Vehicle and Motorcycle Crashes.” European Journal of Trauma and Emergency Surgery, 2024.


BibTeX   Click to copy

@article{nelofar2024a,
  title = {Alcohol is a risk factor for helmet non-use and fatalities in off-road vehicle and motorcycle crashes},
  year = {2024},
  journal = {European Journal of Trauma and Emergency Surgery},
  author = {Kureshi, Nelofar and Walling, S. and Erdogan, Mete and Opra, Izabella and Green, Robert S. and Clarke, David B.}
}

Abstract

Off-road vehicle (ORV) and motorcycle use is common in Canada; however, risk of serious injury is heightened when these vehicles are operated without helmets and under the influence of alcohol. This study evaluated the impact of alcohol intoxication on helmet non-use and mortality among ORV and motorcycle crashes. Using data collected from the Nova Scotia Trauma Registry, a retrospective analysis (2002–2017) of ORV and motorcycle crashes resulting in major traumatic brain injury was performed. Patients were grouped by blood alcohol concentration (BAC) as negative (< 2 mmol/L), legally intoxicated (2-17.3 mmol/L) or criminally intoxicated (> 17.3 mmol/L). Logistic regression models were constructed to test for helmet non-use and mortality. A total of 424 trauma patients were included in the analysis (220 ORV, 204 motorcycle). Less than half (45%) of patients involved in ORV crashes were wearing helmets and 65% were criminally intoxicated. Most patients involved in motorcycle crashes were helmeted at time of injury (88.7%) and 18% were criminally intoxicated. Those with criminal levels of intoxication had 3.7 times the odds of being unhelmeted and were 3 times more likely to die prehospital compared to BAC negative patients. There were significantly increased odds of in-hospital mortality among those with both legal (OR = 5.63), and criminal intoxication levels (OR = 4.97) compared to patients who were BAC negative. Alcohol intoxication is more frequently observed in ORV versus motorcycle crashes. Criminal intoxication is associated with helmet non-use. Any level of intoxication is a predictor of increased in-hospital mortality.


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