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NL: Study Finds "No Increased Risk" for Marijuana-Using Drivers

StoptheDrugWar.org

Drug War Chronicle

Friday 14 May 2004

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Dutch researchers studying the association between drug use and traffic
accidents have found "no increased risk" of accident-related trauma in
drivers who have been using marijuana. The finding comes amidst increasing
controversy over "drugged driving" and the federal push to see
zero-tolerance DUID (Driving Under the Influence of Drugs) laws passed
nationwide (http://stopthedrugwar.org/chronicle/329/driving.shtml). Under
federal model legislation, those laws would define drivers found with even
traces of illicit drugs in their system as impaired -- without requiring
any showing of actual impairment.

The study, which was conducted by scientists at the Institute for Road
Safety Research in the Netherlands, reviewed the cases of 110 drivers
hospitalized in traffic accidents, as well as an additional 816 control
subjects selected at random as they drove down Dutch roads. All 926
subjects underwent blood or urine drug testing. The main objective of the
study, wrote the authors, "was to estimate the association between
psychoactive drug use and motor vehicle accidents requiring
hospitalization." Researchers used the "odds ratio," or the likelihood that
the use of single or multiple drugs would increase the odds of getting into
a traffic accident requiring hospitalization.

Unsurprisingly, the study found that driving under the influence of alcohol
dramatically increased the odds of getting in wreck. Even people who
consumed less than the legal limit (those between 0.5% and 0.8% blood
alcohol levels) had a five-fold increase in the risk of serious accident,
while drivers above the US legal limit were 15 times more likely to get in
bad wrecks. Likewise, drivers using benzodiazepines, such as Valium and
Rohypnol, were five times more likely to smash up. And drivers using
multi-drug or drug and alcohol combinations were also much more likely to
have an accident requiring hospitalization.

For drivers using amphetamines, cocaine, or opiates, the researchers found
some increased risk, but qualified it as "not statistically significant."
And the pot-heads?

They didn't actually live up to the portrayal of them by the drug warriors
as a highway menace. "There was no increased risk for road trauma found for
drivers exposed to cannabis," is how the authors put it in their abstract.

The complete article, "Psychoactive substance use and the risk of motor
vehicle accidents," published in the professional journal Accident Analysis
and Prevention, is not available online unless you want to pay $30 to the
publishers (http://www.sciencedirect.com), but an abstract is available at
PubMed at:
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/entrez/query.fcgi?cmd=Retrieve&db=pubmed&dopt=Abstract&list_uids=15094417


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