College students' use of transportation networking companies: An opportunity to decrease substance-impaired driving

Journal of American College Health : J of ACH
Jennifer M WhitehillMegan A Moreno

Abstract

Objective: To examine the use of transportation networking companies (TNCs) (eg, Uber) among substance-using students in rural and urban college settings. Participants: Students at two large state universities were randomly selected and screened for substance use. Participants reported use of TNCs generally and after substance use and whether TNC use was on or near campus or in other environments. Methods: Data were evaluated using chi-square test, t-tests, and Fisher's exact tests. Results: Most (85%) participants (n = 99, 61% response rate) had used a TNC. Among students who used TNCs on/near campus, 98% of rural students used them after substance use compared to 85% of urban students (p = .037). We did not detect differences in TNC use by gender or age. Conclusions: Results indicate that TNC use is common after college student substance use and may play a particularly important role in preventing impaired driving for rural campuses where existing transportation options are limited.

References

Feb 27, 2007·Journal of American College Health : J of ACH·UNKNOWN American College Health Association
Jul 23, 2008·The Journal of Rural Health : Official Journal of the American Rural Health Association and the National Rural Health Care Association·David LambertDavid Hartley
Aug 25, 2010·Journal of Studies on Alcohol and Drugs·Ashlee C CarterMark S Goldman
Feb 28, 2013·Traffic Injury Prevention·Michael Sivak
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Jul 28, 2016·American Journal of Epidemiology·Noli Brazil, David S Kirk
Sep 24, 2016·Journal of American College Health : J of ACH·Bruce Simons-MortonDanping Liu

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Citations

Jul 19, 2019·The Western Journal of Emergency Medicine·Amar TomarJohn R Richards

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Software Mentioned

Uber
Lyft

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