Study: Marijuana may not impair driving ability

by Elsewhere 12 Replies latest jw friends

  • Elsewhere
    Elsewhere

    I agree that more studies are needed to nail this down for sure, but this study is quite impressive.

    "The Effects of Alcohol on Driver-Controlled Behavior in a Driving Simulator, Phase I," DOT-HS-806-414

    Marijuana May Not Impair Driving Ability At All

    By Steve Elliott in News Wednesday, Mar. 17 2010 @ 10:42AM

    Does marijuana really affect your ability to drive safely? An Orange County, California attorney says there's evidence to show it doesn't -- and testing for the presence of marijuana doesn't measure impairment, anyway.

    Drunk driving laws today typically define "driving under the influence" as covering both alcohol and drugs, with marijuana included as "drugs." In most states, the very presence of marijuana in a driver's blood is either illegal in itself, or is considered proof of impairment.

    "The prevailing view for years has been that cannabis, like alcohol, impairs the coordination, reflexes, perception and judgment necessary for the safe operation of a vehicle," said DUI attorney Lawrence Taylor.

    But none of us has the pot equivalent of those ubiquitous "I was so drunk I totaled my car when I was a teenager" type of stories. And the highway carnage that would accompany marijuana's popularity -- like that which has accompanied alcohol's -- seems never to have happened.

    The blood or urine tests typically used to determine the presence of marijuana metabolites don't measure impairment or intoxication; in fact, such tests can detect marijuana days or even weeks after it was last ingested, long after any "impairment" is in the distant past.

    The federal government's Department of Transportation (DOT) did research with a fully interactive simulator on the effects of alcohol and marijuana, alone and in combination, on driver behavior and performance ("The Effects of Alcohol on Driver-Controlled Behavior in a Driving Simulator, Phase I," DOT-HS-806-414). The study found that alcohol consistently and significantly caused impairment -- but that marijuana only had an occasional effect.

    Further, contrary to drug warrior mythology, there was little evidence of interaction between alcohol and marijuana.

    Speeding tickets and accidents went up with the use of alcohol, but no marijuana influence on speeding and accidents was noted. Additionally, alcohol-impaired drivers who also smoked marijuana showed no additional impairment from the pot.

    The California Department of Justice came to a different conclusion, claiming that marijuana does impair driving skills, particularly at high-dose levels or among inexperienced users ("Marijuana and Alcohol: A Driver Performance Study," California Office of Traffic Safety Project No. 087902).

    But a more recent federal study found that "THC [the active ingredient in marijuana] is not a profoundly impairing drug... It apparently affects controlled information processing in a variety of laboratory tests, but not to the extent which is beyond the individual's ability to control when he is motivated and permitted to do so in driving" ("Marijuana and Actual Performance," DOT-HS-808-078).

    The federal study says that "It appears not possible to conclude anything about a driver's impairment on the basis of his/her plasma concentrations of THC... determined in a single sample."

    "In other words, (1) marijuana may not impair driving ability at all, and (2) the blood 'evidence' usually measures only an inactive substance which may have been present for days," said Taylor.

    "Prosecutors readily acknowledge that a person who smoked a week earlier couldn't possibly be impaired by marijuana, and yet they still prosecute, and often win, these cases," noted a commenter on Taylor's webpage.

  • ldrnomo
    ldrnomo

    DUH, I could have told you that without a study.

    LD

  • Judge Dread
    Judge Dread

    Yeah..................right.

    Judge Dread

  • OUTLAW
    OUTLAW

    Marijuana Smokers are much more carefull drivers than people think..

    Most Marijuana smokers will wait for the Stop Sign to turn Green.

    Before proceeding through an intersection..

    http://hotmommas.files.wordpress.com/2009/11/stop-sign.jpg

    ........................OUTLAW

  • BurnTheShips
    BurnTheShips

    I am not sure I buy this.

    Here is a different study that found that there was a measure of driving impairment.

    http://www.druglibrary.org/schaffer/misc/driving/driving.htm

    Not nearly so bad as alcohol, however, and more easily compensated.

    BTS

  • Twitch
    Twitch

    How does one become a test subject for this kinda thing anyways?

    Just looking to do my part for the greater good,....

    hehe

  • minimus
    minimus

    Ohhhh Elsewhere.

  • RubaDub
    RubaDub

    Even if you have an accident, you will do far less damage while being high on pot since you were likely driving along in the right lane of a highway doing about 20MPH (and thinking you were speeding).

    Rub a Dub

  • dinah
    dinah

    I would never smoke then get out on the road. The problem is, the pot can be detected by drug tests long after the high has worn off. That's what I don't get about drug testing at work. If you smoked some weed on a Saturday night, you are not still high on Monday.

    Legalize it already!

  • Elsewhere
    Elsewhere

    > Ohhhh Elsewhere.

    I'm just say'in!

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