Alcohol impairs driving more than marijuana
19:00 20 March 02
Arran Frood
A single glass of wine will impair your driving
more than smoking a joint. And under certain test conditions,
the complex way alcohol and cannabis combine to affect driving
behaviour suggests that someone who has taken both may drive less
recklessly than a person who is simply drunk.
These are the findings of a major new study
by British transport researchers. The unpublished research, seen
exclusively by New Scientist, stops well short of condoning driving
under the influence of even small amounts of cannabis. But in
a week which has seen renewed debate in Britain surrounding the
criminalisation of cannabis, it throws an uncomfortable spotlight
on a problem confronting governments everywhere - how to deter
the growing numbers of cannabis users from "dope driving".
At present there is no accurate test that
can reveal whether a driver has taken cannabis before driving,
and developing one will not be easy. But even when this problem
is cracked, another will remain - where to set the safety threshold
for smoking cannabis.
Advocates of zero tolerance say there should
be penalties for drivers caught with any amount of recently smoked
cannabis in their body. The new research suggests that would only
be credible if governments also adopted zero tolerance on drink
driving.
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