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UK: BMA calls for tougher drug-drive regulations

Jeremy Laurance

The Independent

Tuesday 12 Mar 2002

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Tougher action must be taken to counteract the rise in fatal road accidents
caused by illegal drugs, doctors' leaders said yesterday.

The use of cannabis and similar drugs was now so common it had begun to
pose as big a menace on the roads as alcohol, the British Medical
Association (BMA) said.

The number of cannabis users involved in fatal accidents rose from 3 per
cent to 12 per cent between the late 1980s and the late 1990s, studies by
the Transport and Road Research Laboratory found.

This week, David Blunkett, the Home Secretary, is expected to announce that
an experimental relaxation in the law on cannabis, downgrading it from
Category A to Category B, is to be made permanent. The effect of the
change, reducing the penalties for possession, is expected to increase
consumption.

The BMA has called for a campaign to educate the public on the dangers of
driving while under the influence of drugs. It also wants more research to
develop sensitive drug tests. Nearly half of those surveyed aged 16 to 24
have reported using cannabis and more than a third say they have taken
hallucinogens, such as ecstasy.

Vivienne Nathanson, the BMA's head of science and ethics, said: "Whatever
action the Government takes on drug-driving, it is essential it is
accompanied by a public awareness campaign. People generally accept you
shouldn't drink and drive but probably have no idea about the effects of
drugs on their driving ability."

Prescribed drugs, including tranquillisers, painkillers and
anti-histamines, could be equally dangerous. "All of these can have a
sedative effect, yet most people probably think it is totally safe for them
to drive," Dr Nathanson said.

The BMA says urgent research is needed to establish the precise effects of
drugs, such as cannabis, which can be found in the blood 28 days or more
after use. Cannabis is known to impair co-ordination, visual perception,
tracking and vigilance but studies of its effect on driving skills and road
safety are inconclusive.

Driving while unfit because of drugs is an offence but there is no legal
blood-drug limit. The lack of accurate testing devices makes the
legislation very difficult to enforce.

In a briefing for MPs, the BMA says developing accurate tests for drugs
poses a considerable scientific challenge. Alcohol tests are based on a
clinical understanding of the metabolic rate and excretion from the body as
well as its effect on the brain.

Comparable tests to detect drug levels in the body remain elusive because
there is a huge range of legal and illegal drugs that have different
effects and remain in the body for differing amounts of time.

 

 

 

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