Pubdate: Thu, 09 Feb 2017 Source: Regina Leader-Post (CN SN) Copyright: 2017 The Leader-Post Ltd. Contact: http://www.leaderpost.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/361 Author: Pamela Cowan Page: A2 THE DOPE ON DRIVING WHILE DRUG-IMPAIRED Reporter's eerie experience in simulator suit I felt like Jimmy Hoffa with one leg encased in cement. I was lurching because of my super heavy left leg, which made it tough to walk and impossible to navigate in a straight line. My ears buzzed with random sounds. My double vision was blurry with flashing red, blue and green lights on the periphery. If I shut one eye I could kind of focus on what was straight ahead. But barely. When four tennis balls were lobbed my way, I was so uncoordinated and my reaction time so slow I couldn't catch one. My right arm chronically twitched and I could barely turn my neck or bend my elbows because of my restricted movement. I was wearing Ford's Drugged Driving Suit at the Queensbury Convention Centre - one of the displays at the Saskatchewan Safety Council's Industrial Safety Seminar being held in Regina this week. The suit was developed by the Ford Motor Company in collaboration with scientists from the Meyer-Hentshcel Institute in Germany to mimic some effects of drugs such as cannabis, cocaine, heroin and MDMA (ecstasy). "This is to make sure people don't drive while they're impaired," said Grant Bastedo, Ford spokesman. The suit, or ones like it, have been used in demonstrations around the world. "Probably the most disorienting thing is the vision impairment glasses," Bastedo said. "What they do is produce tunnel vision and they blur your vision the same it would be under the effects of drugs. The headphones you put on have disorientating sounds and random machine sounds that disorientate a person." Elbow and knee pads put on with Velcro slow movement. A heavy weight on one leg and a lighter weight on the opposite arm affect balance and impede normal walking. A tremor generator on the hand causes a tremor similar to being on a hallucinogenic. "When you put all of those things together, when you wear it, you're very impaired and it's a way you should never drive a vehicle, obviously," Bastedo said. "The great thing about the suit is you can feel what that feels like without actually being impaired. If you talk to a police officer, they will say that most people, when they are impaired, don't feel like they're impaired." I definitely felt impaired. According to SGI, many collisions that have drugs as a contributing factor also involve alcohol. Drugs can include illegal drugs or prescription medications. In 2015, there were 68 police-reported collisions that had drugs as a major contributing factor. Those collisions led to 26 injuries and two deaths. Of the 68 collisions, only 31 didn't also have alcohol as a factor. The 31 collisions resulted in 15 injuries and zero deaths. As I left Queensbury, clear sighted and lighter in the leg, I pondered the question Bastedo asked me while I was testing the drugged driving suit: Did I feel safe to drive? No. I'd be terrified to get behind the wheel of a car in that condition or have a high driver in charge of 3,000 pounds of metal hurtling towards me or my loved ones. - --- MAP posted-by: Matt