Freakonomics Radio - 55. The Perils of Drunk Walking
Episode Date: December 27, 2011We know it's terribly dangerous to drive drunk. But heading home on foot isn't the solution. ...
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From APM, American Public Media, and WNYC, this is Freakonomics Radio on Marketplace.
Here's the host of Marketplace, Jeremy Hobson.
It's Freakonomics time.
Every two weeks we explore the hidden side of everything and today why the first decision
you make in 2012 is riskier than you think.
Here's Stephen Dubner.
Happy New Year, everybody. Now, how are you getting home from that party?
If you're in New York City, where I live, good luck getting a taxi.
And if you've had some champagne and you're even
thinking about driving home, well, don't. Drinking and driving is not only against the law,
but it can also be deadly. Over the limit, under arrest.
Friends don't let friends drive drunk. All right. So maybe a walk home.
Smart move, right?
That's a terrible idea.
Walking drunk is one of the most dangerous activities you can engage in.
That's Steve Levitt.
He's my Freakonomics friend and co-author.
He's also an economist at the University of Chicago.
Truly, if you're faced with exactly two choices, walking drunk or driving drunk, you absolutely should drive drunk.
Now, wait a minute.
Levitt is not advocating that people drive drunk.
We know how incredibly dangerous that is.
But what about drunk walking?
Is that dangerous?
Consider a few numbers. In 2009, the most recent year for which we have data, about 34,000 people died in traffic accidents.
Roughly half of them were drivers, 41% of whom were drunk.
Now, there were about 4,000 pedestrians killed, and 35% of them were drunk. Here's Levitt again. For every mile walked drunk,
turns out to be eight times more dangerous than the mile driven drunk. So just to put it simply,
if you need to walk a mile from a party to your home, you're eight times more likely to die doing
that than if you jump behind the wheel and drive your car that same mile. Now, there are some caveats here. A calculation like this requires some assumptions because
there's no government database on drunk walking. Also, people drive drunk much farther distances
than they'd walk drunk. And most important, a drunk walker can't hurt or kill someone else
the way a drunk driver can. That said, the death toll from drunk walking
is undeniable. The danger of impaired walking is not insignificant. And certainly when it
comes down to you, it's definitely significant. Thomas Esposito is a trauma surgeon at Loyola
University Health System in the Chicago area. He's used to seeing a New Year's Day
spike in pedestrians who've been hit by cars. As a matter of fact, January 1st is the deadliest day
of the year for pedestrians, and 58% of the people who died were drunk. I'd rather work New Year's
Eve than New Year's Day, because a lot of the time on New Year's Day, that's when people start to
realize someone's missing. Where are they? And then they find them at the bottom of the time on New Year's Day, that's when people start to realize someone's missing, where are they?
And then they find them at the bottom of the stairs or on the side of the road injured.
Esposito also has personal experience with drunk walking.
A few years ago, his cousin was hit by a car and killed while walking home from a New Year's party.
He'd been drinking, thought it was better to leave his car and go home
on foot. Esposito believes we've done a pretty good job getting out the don't drink and drive
message, but that we could do a lot better with don't drink and walk. Here's Steve Levitt again.
For 20 years, we've been told you should never, ever drive drunk. We should have been told you
should never, ever walk drunk and you should never, ever drive drunk. We should have been told you should never, ever walk drunk
and you should never, ever drive drunk.
And because nobody thought about it
when we were coming up with what was moral and immoral,
somehow now drunk walking just can't find its way
into the immoral box.
So listen, have a great New Year's celebration.
But if a friend has been drinking
and starts reaching for the car keys or decides to set off on foot, don't let them.
Because remember, friends don't let friends walk drunk.
I'm Stephen Dubner for Marketplace.
For old times' sake and days gone by, for better days we knew. I drink a toast to memory. I drink a toast to you.
Here's to you. Stephen Dubner, our Freakonomics correspondent, he puts out a podcast, too.
You can get that on iTunes and hear more at Freakonomics.com.