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How marijuana affects your driving performance

 

how marijuana effect driving skills

MARIJUANA AND DRIVING

Whenever the subject of reforming marijuana laws comes up, someone always brings up the issue of driving while high, which makes sense. It’s an established fact that alcohol increases a drivers accident risk – but does that same risk apply to marijuana? The scientific research out there shows that cannabis is rarely a factor in car accidents, and has much less of an impact on the psychomotor skills needed for driving than alcohol does.

In fact, when it comes to speed and focus, high and drunk drivers actually have the exact opposite reactions. Drivers under the influence of marijuana are aware of their impairment and compensate for it by slowing down and over-compensating their focus, while drunk drivers tend to drive in a more risky manner proportional to their intoxication.

There’s a large amount of research out there on the effects of marijuana on driving, and the results are fairly consistent: Marijuana has a measurable yet relatively mild effect on psychomotor skills, yet it does not appear to play a significant role in vehicle crashes, particularly when compared to alcohol. Check out the conclusions from the US Department of Transportation study:

* Current users of marijuana prefer THC doses of about 300 ug/kg to achieve their desired “high”.

* It is possible to safely study the effects of marijuana on driving on highways or city streets in the presence of other traffic.

* Marijuana smoking impairs fundamental road tracking ability with the degree if impairment increasing as a function of the consumed THC dose.

* Marijuana smoking which delivers THC up to a 300 ug/kg dose slightly impairs the ability to maintain a constant headway while following another car.

* A low THC dose (100 ug/kg) does not impair driving ability in urban traffic to the same extent as a blood alcohol concentration (BAC) of 0.04g%.

* Drivers under the influence of marijuana tend to over-estimate the adverse effects of the drug on their driving quality and compensate when they can; e.g. by increasing effort to accomplish the task, increasing headway or slowing down, or a combination of these.

* Drivers under the influence of alcohol tend to under-estimate the adverse effects of the drug on their driving quality and do not invest compensatory effort.

* The maximum road tracking impairment after the highest THC dose (300 ug/kg) was within a range of effects produced by many commonly used medicinal drugs and less than that associated with a blood alcohol concentration (BAC) of 0.08g% in previous studies employing the same test.

* It is not possible to conclude anything about a driver’s impairment on the basis of his/her plasma concentrations of THC and THC-COOH determined in a single sample.

So stoners are safer because they’re paranoid?

Know someone addicted to marijuana? They can overcome addiction by relying on a specialized marijuana rehab center for treatment.

SOURCE: CLICK HERE

 


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Mark 2100  - Did we need proof?   |83.70.229.xxx |2009-06-23 21:11:02
Did we really need proof that smoking didn't affect driving? There are
entire populations, like Rastafarian's, that are stoned all the time
and drive just like the rest of the world.

When the Mark 2100
revolution overthrows all the world governments I will support, legalize
and generously distribute cannabis in all it's greeny goodness.

http://www.mark2100.com/
Anonymous  - Entire populations?   |98.216.217.xxx |2009-06-24 20:18:18
Entire populations like... where?? Could you have picked a more obscure
population? And you've got to wonder, when picking something so obscure... what
do they drive there? Are they driving vehicles that can even do any damage in a
car crash?
mranon  - Nice generalization   |71.59.135.xxx |2009-06-23 21:52:11
Not all stoners are paranoid, and for me, driving high is the same as driving
normal, because driving itself is a different state of consciousness in and of
itself.
jimmy c. corn  - why stoners overcompensate   |75.42.223.xxx |2009-06-24 12:15:31
People who are high are more likely to overcompensate than people who are drunk
because they face the possibility of a higher penalty. Since drug penalties are
so harsh, while DUI penalties can be very mild, the drug users have much more
incentive to not get caught.

Legalization would decrease that incentive,
probably causing people to treat being high like being drunk. That doesn't mean
legalization is a bad idea, but its something to consider.
Bill   |71.201.0.xxx |2009-06-26 07:22:04
i'm not sure about the rest of the US but in Illinois after your first DUI you
get a breathalyzer in your car and you have to pay the breathalyzer manufacturer
every month for their service. that is on top of all the court costs. one of my
friends got pulled over with a 7 gram blunt and got probation for a year and had
court costs, that's it. my other friend got a DUI (before they started the
breathalyzer system) and he got his license taken away for 2 years and
probation for 2 years and the court costs.

If you get baked outta your mind and
get pulled over (as long as you are coherent) you get let go and get into no
trouble. if you've been drinking, but you're sober enough to drive and you get
pulled over and b*** a .09 you get a DUI.

Legalization wouldn't necessarily
make people lose the incentive to drive good while high. some people may, but
since THC chemically alters the way your brain works, it may continue to make
Emillzzzz   |24.34.8.xxx |2009-06-24 18:00:38
Are you serious I drive high everyday. Like mr. anon said driving is a different
state of consciousness. Ive never even come close to getting in an accident
while high and then a day im not high i get in an accident. WTF IS THAT!?? I
know so many, and i mean so many people that drive high everyday smoking huge
blunts, and they can drive just fine, so all you retards that cant handle you
bud. Cry to your mommies pu***s
Anonymous   |24.34.8.xxx |2009-06-24 18:02:57
Driving high is the same as driving normal in my book.
Anonymous  - driving   |24.152.189.xxx |2009-06-24 19:17:49
i think its different for various people. For me i drive fine because it
actually makes me more alert and cautious most of the time because i realize i
need to concentrate on what im doing
Anonymous   |24.35.90.xxx |2009-06-28 20:25:50
Same here
Anonymous  - Consider Your Source!   |98.216.217.xxx |2009-06-24 20:41:32
When I was in 7th grade, in 1987, someone in my class did a report on how
mosquitoes spread HIV/AIDS. I know, that comment seems unrelated to this
article... but did anyone see when this "study" was originally
conducted? 1993! Why would anyone site sources so old??

Also, did anyone READ
the actual study? It's full of contradictions. The Abstract says the first test
was performed 30 and 90 minutes after smoking and the Methods section says 40
minutes and an hour later.

How can a study who's Final Report date of November
1993 site sources from 1995?

Does the U.S. Government measure in metric?
Anonymous   |87.122.156.xxx |2009-06-26 00:21:36
What most people do forget / not know in discussions like this: If you are too
high to drive, you just don't WANT to. I can´t say the same for alcohol.
Anonymous   |66.116.126.xxx |2009-06-26 07:12:36
Of course marijuana is going to be minor in comparison to alcohol- people aren't
going to admit to using it in a friggin survey because it's illegal! Be wary of
any statistic that involves s3x or drugs, they are almost never accurate.
tariq hassan  - http://funfashion4u.blogspot.com   |116.71.166.xxx |2009-06-26 07:31:56
we really need proof that smoking affect during driving
Wayne Wilso  - high trucker   |70.81.125.xxx |2009-06-26 19:44:06
Ive been a trucker for 35 years and ive always drove my truck high with 0
accidents
beastlycarsSTONED  - high drag racer   |75.176.153.xxx |2009-08-12 01:06:48
well i can say that personally smoking pot does not change how i drive in any
negative way. i drive a 400+ horse power mustang cobra every day and race it
often while stoned and have never had any problems driving stoned. if anything
it makes me concentrate harder because it kinda makes you "zone out"
into what your doing and removes all other distractions from my mind. and by
zone out i dont mean spacing out, there is a difference
Audi S4  - In the zone   |98.240.70.xxx |2009-08-18 23:57:47
Like beastlycarsSTONED said, driving while having smoked pot makes me feel more
"in the zone", or in the 'now' therefore I don't get distracted as
easily.
solipsist  - back-assward   |98.206.70.xxx |2009-09-19 03:17:44

I'm recovering from cancer. I became dependant on morphine- and chose to
ween myself at a methadone clinic. We are required to see
their counselor twice a week. Every time I see him, I have to listen
to this recovering alcoholic with a degree in social work tell me how
damaging pot is to me, and how it's just the same as alcohol.  Yet-
everytime I ask them to reduce my methadone dose, he tells me how worried
he is that I'm reducing my intake too quickly. (I suspect they've told
me they've reduced me, when in fact they have not.) It is, by the way, a
Methadone Maitenance program. By the way, I'm being Federally
Funded 100% by the U.S. Government, who is billed $85 a week by this
clinic. This is another reason I want to get off of this poison
(methadone) as quickly as possible. You wouldn't believe the sh*t I
catch for my positive te...
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