RE: Drugged Driving
Thursday 13th March 2003

Drugged Driving

Will a new law come into force to tackle the growing problem of spaced out motorists?


Author
Discussion

danger mouse

Original Poster:

3,828 posts

282 months

Thursday 13th March 2003
quotequote all
There is such a wide veritety of drugs that one maybe under the influence of if you include Prescription substances. It will be an absolute nightmare for the police to enforce this new law.

They will have to become amateur pharmicologists to get their heads round what a driver may have taken and what the legal limit for the drugs is before even deciding whether or not it may be illicit.

I know it is all in the aid of reducing accients and injury, but don't traffic cops have enough to do as it is?

It also is unlikely to take into account that people on prescribed painkillers build up a resistance to their perfectly legal drugs over long periods, so may have a very high ppm blood count even though they are as safe as they would be with out the drug in their system...

...I guess the same cam be said for alcohol, but this is very rearly precribed.


Mouse

plotloss

67,280 posts

291 months

Thursday 13th March 2003
quotequote all
Unenforceable IMHO, complete waste of time, money and effort even trying to research it, there are so many unknown factors it will be nigh on impossible to secure a set of rules to apply a law to.

Matt.

Bonce

4,339 posts

300 months

Thursday 13th March 2003
quotequote all

however, police officers have been given training on roadside recognition testing

For example, if marijuana use is suspected, the police officer puts a packet of chocolate hob-nobs on the dashboard and watches to see if the suspect reaches out for them.

apache

39,731 posts

305 months

Thursday 13th March 2003
quotequote all
a joke, look at the problems they are having trying to detect drugs in Sport

andytk

1,558 posts

287 months

Thursday 13th March 2003
quotequote all

Over six months last year Durham Police have taken blood screenings from all of the 23 people killed in road accidents. The samples revealed that 50% had traces of either cannabis, cocaine, ecstasy or another prescrption drug.



Of course they bloody do. These drugs stay in your system for ages. In some cases months. And seeing as how half the population don't have a problem with the odd recreational drug it stands to reason that there will be traces of drugs in their bodies. It doesn't automatically mean they got toked up and went out for a drive.

I reckon that in some of the dodgier parts of the UK if you were to stop EVERY car passing along a road and force its driver to give a blood test you'd come up with a remarkably similar result to the 50% figure.

And remember children, don't drink and drive, smoke and fly

Andy

Citizen Rat

41 posts

278 months

Thursday 13th March 2003
quotequote all

andytk said:

50% had traces of either cannabis, cocaine, ecstasy or another prescrption drug.





How do I get these on prescrption?

plotloss

67,280 posts

291 months

Thursday 13th March 2003
quotequote all
Not sure about the others but if you get twatted off a moped in Greece they give you a novocain injection...

Matt.

woof

8,456 posts

298 months

Thursday 13th March 2003
quotequote all



Of course they bloody do. These drugs stay in your system for ages. In some cases months. And seeing as how half the population don't have a problem with the odd recreational drug it stands to reason that there will be traces of drugs in their bodies. It doesn't automatically mean they got toked up and went out for a drive.



not true - for instance coke is out of your system within 24hrs - canabis takes up to 3 months.
I'm totally pro drug testing - dope and pills are the biggest problems - coke's if anything would improve responses - I can the AA recommeding a few lines instead of a can of red bull

plotloss

67,280 posts

291 months

Thursday 13th March 2003
quotequote all
Yeah but the flip side of that is that within 24 hours the effects of the bolivian are gone. So in that scenario whilst you could be unimpaired chemically the traces would still show up in a drug test.

Tricky...

Matt.

woof

8,456 posts

298 months

Thursday 13th March 2003
quotequote all
THe effects have gone after an hour if your lucky ! If your tested 24hrs after a nosebag session there's no trace (urine/blood test) However if they take the hair strand test then that can show traces of coke. (Perhaps I'm sounding like I know too much about this subject ??!)


plotloss said: Yeah but the flip side of that is that within 24 hours the effects of the bolivian are gone. So in that scenario whilst you could be unimpaired chemically the traces would still show up in a drug test.

Tricky...

Matt.


plotloss

67,280 posts

291 months

Thursday 13th March 2003
quotequote all
It wont have made it into the hair in 24 hours.

I still think though that drug testing at the roadside is a misnoma because of the fact that no research has gone into the effects of rec pharms on reactions due to the fact that rec pharms are illegal.

Matt.

woof

8,456 posts

298 months

Thursday 13th March 2003
quotequote all

plotloss said: It wont have made it into the hair in 24 hours.

Matt.


quite true - well 1 week then.

nefarious

989 posts

286 months

Thursday 13th March 2003
quotequote all
What blew the previous tests out of the water, and why these schemes will fail is the sheer cost of testing.
Sure, you can do a basic test roadside or at the station for very little, but these are only qualitative tests and will only give a positive or negative result (i.e. no way to accurately tell whether you've got a positive because somebody is currently mashed, or whether they just had a spliff a month ago). In order to do a quantitative test, to a sufficient level of accuracy to prove a specified level of most drugs requires a Gas-Chromatogram-Mass-Spectrometer test which costs about £1100 per test.

Up to now the police get round this burden of proof, by not putting a specified acceptable quantitative limit, but instead using the term 'unfit'. 'Unfit' is determined by the opinion of a police doctor combined with a positive qualitative test. However, if the police were to make testing more widespread, then this slapdash system would not stand up to proper human rights scrutiny, and quantitative tests would be required.

(I used to work for the Institute for the Study of Drug Dependance, which advises customs and police)

plotloss

67,280 posts

291 months

Thursday 13th March 2003
quotequote all
Interesting stuff!

So, with an average of 6 million regular pot smokers, you must assert that something like 80% of those are also car drivers that many £1100 a go tests soon add up.

Bin it now before you waste any more money Tone.

Matt.

nefarious

989 posts

286 months

Thursday 13th March 2003
quotequote all
Interestingly, specifically with weed, the powers that be are also aware that there amy be significant ground for the principle of 'unfit', which is crucial to all drink/drug driving charges to be challenged.
There is significant research to indicate that moderate smoking does not significantly reduce the standard of driving.
I used to have the results of the Canadian Department of Transports research, but don't have them to hand. Basically they tested a hundred or so drivers on a simulator, half were given a dose of THC and half a placebo. The 'stoned' drivers, on average, took longer to complete to course, but in general were more cautious. On low and medium level hazards both sets of drivers performed similarly, but on high level hazards (e.g. last second run-outs) the stoned drivers actually had a lower accident rate.
Interestingly, in self-reporting the stoned drivers gave themselves a far worse self-evaluation than the sober ones. (Similar tests on drunk drivers show they regard their performance far better than the control group).

soulpatch

4,693 posts

279 months

Thursday 13th March 2003
quotequote all
"...either cannabis, cocaine, ecstasy or another prescrption drug."

Since when did cannabis, cocaine and ectasy become precription drugs...?!!

v8thunder

27,647 posts

279 months

Thursday 13th March 2003
quotequote all
They need to lay off the drunk driving campaigns and transfer the funds over to targeting this. Slow reactions are one thing, but when the road is purple and full of yellow rabbits playing guitars, god knows what'll happen.

nefarious

989 posts

286 months

Thursday 13th March 2003
quotequote all

v8thunder said:the road is purple and full of yellow rabbits playing guitars, god knows what'll happen.


Sounds like you're getting a better class of weed that the rest of the country



>> Edited by nefarious on Thursday 13th March 17:03

plotloss

67,280 posts

291 months

Thursday 13th March 2003
quotequote all

nefarious said:

v8thunder said:the road is purple and full of yellow rabbits playing guitars, god knows what'll happen.


Sounds like you're getting a better class of weed that the rest of the country



>> Edited by nefarious on Thursday 13th March 17:03


Getting a better class of ANYTHING more like!

Matt.

RichB

55,091 posts

305 months

Thursday 13th March 2003
quotequote all

v8thunder said: They need to lay off the drunk driving campaigns and transfer the funds over to targeting this.
This is a touchy subject for me at the moment. My 20 year old son wrote off his car on Tuesday night after smoking "a bit of stuff". Having seen where he went off and looked at the wreckage in the salvage yard I am amazed he is alive. I don't know if he drives like an idiot all the time (I am told not) BUT people wouldn't pay to use cannabis if had NO effect would they? Rich... somewhat pissed off this week - especially having been to a RTA funeral last week!



>> Edited by RichB on Thursday 13th March 17:25