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Does Arizona have more wrong-way driving deaths than any other state?

The 12 News I-Team analyzed national data to see how Arizona roads compare to other states over the last 20 years.

Nearly 400 people died in wrong-way wrecks in Arizona from 1997 to 2017, according to the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration—meaning this state had fewer wrong-way driving-related deaths than 23 other states and Puerto Rico in those 20 years. 

However, deaths caused by wrong-way driving wrecks in 2017 were the highest in Arizona since 2000, pushing the state up in the ranks in the most recent year. 

RELATED: Wrong-way incidents on the rise in Arizona 

The NHTSA report showed that across the state, 31 people died in 24 wrong-way crashes in 2017, the most recent year for which data was available. 

Across the country, 1,537 people were killed in wrong-way collisions in 2017. 

The Arizona Department of Transportation completed a study in 2015 aimed to reduce wrong-way driving. The study found that 25 percent of wrong-way crashes are fatal, compared to just one percent of crashes overall on divided highways. 

The study found that impaired drivers are the cause of nearly two-thirds of wrong-way crashes.

RELATED: DPS says driver goes wrong way on I-17, crashes into semi-truck 

ADOT also has a thermal camera pilot system on a stretch of I-17 that will alert drivers going the correct way that there could be a wrong way driver on the road. 

DATA: Interact with this map to see the number of fatalities in wrong-way wrecks in each state from 1997-2017

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