Pubdate: Sun, 15 Apr 2012 Source: St. Louis Post-Dispatch (MO) Copyright: 2012 St. Louis Post-Dispatch Contact: http://drugsense.org/url/qFJNhZNm Website: http://www.stltoday.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/418 Author: Maggie Clark LEGAL POT RAISES CONCERN OVER 'DRUGGED DRIVING' Lawmakers Want Limits, but Impairment Is Difficult to Measure. WASHINGTON Twelve years after Colorado legalized the use of marijuana for medicinal purposes, more than 85,000 people have been certified by the state health department to use it. Now, there is increasing concern about a rise in traffic accidents caused by people under the influence of marijuana. Between 2006 and 2010, more than 300 fatal accidents involved drivers who tested positive for cannabis, according to the Colorado Department of Highway Safety. That's why Republican state Sen. Steve King wants Colorado to set a legal limit for marijuana intoxication, somewhat similar to the 0.08 percent blood-alcohol limit states put on driving. And in California, Democratic Assemblywoman Norma Torres wants to set a zero-tolerance ban on driving under the influence of any drug, including marijuana. But bills put forward by both King and Torres have run into opposition from those who say the science around what marijuana does to the body and mind is not conclusive enough to set a legal limit. In Colorado, critics also note that King's approach would cost the state public defender's office about $600,000 per year to defend those accused of "drugged driving" charges. Yet concerns over cannabis intoxication won't go away. Voters in Colorado and Washington state will decide whether to legalize recreational marijuana use, while a dozen more states are considering legalizing marijuana for medical purposes. How does marijuana affect the body? The active ingredient in marijuana is called delta-9-tetrahydrocannabinol, or THC. Whether marijuana is ingested through smoking or eating, THC rapidly goes through the bloodstream to the brain. In the brain, THC slows down receptors that communicate brain functions between synapses, throwing the brain's natural information flow off balance. Users experience diminished pain sensitivity, which explains marijuana's medicinal purpose. But users also experience slowed reaction time, impaired memory function, impaired coordination and altered judgment. How does marijuana's effect on drivers compare to alcohol? Although the symptoms for THC intoxication are similar to alcohol intoxication, the effects on drivers are very different. According to a study by researchers from Yale University, alcohol-impaired drivers struggle with complex tasks, such as merging onto a crowded highway, but can generally perform more automatic functions such as turning on the car. Marijuana users, however, can better handle complex situations than simple tasks like following the curve of a road. The Yale study also notes that the effects of cannabis can vary a lot more between individuals than with alcohol. Factors such as a user's age, weight, tolerance and smoking technique all can make a large difference in how the body absorbs THC. Users of alcohol and marijuana also differ in their perceptions of their own impairment. Alcohol users tend to underestimate their level of impairment and drive faster and more recklessly. Drivers with a blood-alcohol level of 0.04 percent - half the legal limit in most states - experienced impaired driving performance even though the drivers considered themselves as unimpaired, according to a frequently cited 1993 study from the National Highway Transportation Safety Administration. By contrast, marijuana users tend to overestimate their impairment and don't display as many obvious impairment symptoms. In the same government study, drivers who were given about one-third of a joint to smoke rated themselves as impaired even though their driving performance was not. How long does it take for marijuana's effects to wear off? Marijuana's impairment effects usually wear off within about three hours from the time of smoking or eating it. But traces of THC stay in a user's body for up to a month. This can make testing for intoxication problematic because THC shows up in blood tests long after the symptoms that impair driving have gone away. How big of a problem is marijuana-impaired driving? No one is quite sure. One measure comes from a voluntary national roadside survey conducted by NHTSA in 2007. About 14 percent of drivers pulled over at night tested positive for the presence of impairing drugs in their system; the daytime figure was 11 percent. The study looked beyond marijuana and included both legal and illegal substances such as prescription drugs, stimulants and narcotics. Of this group, the most commonly detected drug was marijuana. In a more recent California roadside study, conducted at night over a weekend, more people tested positive for THC (8.4 percent) than for alcohol (7.6 percent). Because of the long time THC can remain in the body, however, the study was not a clear measure of impaired driving. How does the risk of traffic accidents following marijuana consumption compare with the risks of accidents after alcohol consumption? Driving within three hours of consuming cannabis increases the risk of vehicle crashes by about two or three times, according to research published this February from Mark Asbridge, an associate professor at Dalhousie University in Canada. Concerning as that is, it is much less of a risk than alcohol consumption, which increases vehicle crash risk by five to 16 times. - --- MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom