Lodi News-Sentinel

Report: More police training, public education needed to stop ‘drugged’ driving incidents

- By Mary Wisniewski

CHICAGO — Drug-impaired driving has become a bigger problem in the United States than drunken driving, and law enforcemen­t officers need more training to identify it, while the public needs to know that it is unsafe to drive high, according to a new report released this week.

The Governors Highway Safety Associatio­n and the Foundation for Advancing Alcohol Responsibi­lity, national nonprofit safety groups, reported that 43 percent of fatally injured drivers with known test results tested positive for drugs, while 38 percent tested positive for alcohol. The figures are from National Highway Traffic Safety Administra­tion data for 2015, the most recent year available.

This is the first time occurrence­s of drugged driving have surpassed those of drunken driving as shown by tests on dead drivers, according to Jim Hedlund, a former NHTSA official who wrote the report. The report also found that the biggest risk comes from driving under the influence of both alcohol and drugs.

The drugged driving report, which summarizes findings from multiple studies, said law enforcemen­t officers often have a hard time recognizin­g drivers under the influence of drugs, who are more difficult to assess than those driving drunk.

“Officers need to know more than they do for alcohol how to suspect drug impairment, and know that it can exhibit itself in different ways,” Hedlund said in an interview. “Drug impairment has different signs and symptoms — think of the difference between uppers and downers.”

On the operators’ side, many drivers are ignorant about how drugs can impair their driving, and some may think they drive better while using marijuana, which is not true. Marijuana can increase crash risk by 22 to 36 percent, according to studies cited in the report. The report recommends that states develop education campaigns, which can include discussing drugged driving in driver education classes, and informing physicians and pharmacist­s about risks from driving on prescripti­on drugs.

Hedlund said testing for alcohol is pretty straightfo­rward — an officer looks for signs of drinking and can confirm the presence of alcohol with a breath test. But it’s more difficult to detect drug impairment roadside, the report said.

The report acknowledg­es some of the difficulti­es with doing blood tests for marijuana. Marijuana is not metabolize­d in the system in the same way as alcohol, so while a person with a blood-alcohol level of 0.08 or higher is considered too drunk to drive, it is not possible to say the same thing absent other evidence about a person testing positive for tetrahydro­cannabinol, or THC, the main psychoacti­ve component in marijuana.

Delays in drawing blood for a test can allow drugs to metabolize in the system and not provide an accurate measure, while some drugs can remain in the body for days or weeks, long after impairment has ended, the report noted.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States