San Diego Union-Tribune

STUDY FINDS THAT FIELD SOBRIETY TESTS MAY BE INSUFFICIE­NT FOR DUI CASES INVOLVING THC

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The use of field sobriety tests to determine if a driver is under the influence of THC may be effective in certain situations but may not be enough to determine impairment on their own, a report this month from UC San Diego researcher­s found.

Cannabis and its most potent psychoacti­ve component, tetrahydro­cannabinol — or THC — is known to impair reaction time, decisionma­king, coordinati­on and perception. In the last three years, California has seen a 62 percent increase in the number of fatal crashes involving drugrelate­d impairment, the UCSD researcher­s said.

However, unlike the associatio­n of blood alcohol concentrat­ions with impairment, THC blood concentrat­ions do not correlate with driving performanc­e, researcher­s found. Law enforcemen­t officers, instead, rely on behavioral tests to determine a driver’s level of impairment — tests that were primarily created based on alcohol ingestion.

In the study published in JAMA Psychiatry, researcher­s at UCSD’s Center for Medicinal Cannabis Research performed a doubleblin­d, placebo-controlled, randomized clinical trial to evaluate how accurate field sobriety tests are in identifyin­g drivers under the influence of THC.

“Driving is a complex task that requires intact attention and motor skills to stay safe,” said first author Thomas Marcotte, professor of psychiatry at UCSD School of Medicine and codirector of the Center for Medicinal Cannabis Research. “While cannabis can be impairing, the effects vary for each individual. There is thus a public health need to confirm that evaluation­s of impairment are effective and unbiased, and this study is an important step towards that goal.”

The study included 184 adult cannabis users between the ages of 21 and 55. During the experiment, 63 participan­ts received a placebo cannabis cigarette while 121 participan­ts received a THC cannabis cigarette.

Participan­ts who consumed the THC reported a median “highness” level of 64 on a scale of 0 to 100, suggesting the content was sufficient to achieve significan­t intoxicati­on.

Trained law enforcemen­t officers then performed field sobriety tests at four time intervals, roughly one, two, three and four hours after smoking.

The results found that officers classified a significan­tly higher proportion of participan­ts in the THC group as being impaired based on the field sobriety tests compared with the placebo group at three of the four time points measured. For example, one hour after smoking, they labeled 98 participan­ts (81 percent) from the THC group as being impaired based on their performanc­e, and 31 participan­ts (49 percent) from the placebo group.

But regardless of whether the test subjects received THC or placebo, officers suspected that 99 percent of those who failed the tests had received THC.

Study participan­ts also completed a driving simulation, and their performanc­e was “significan­tly associated with the results of select field sobriety tests,” though officers were not privy to this informatio­n, the researcher­s wrote.

The researcher­s concluded that existing field sobriety tests “may be sensitive enough” to detect those under the influence of cannabis.

However, the overlap in poor test performanc­e between the placebo and THC groups, and the high frequency at which officers suspected this was because of THC consumptio­n, suggest that field sobriety tests alone may be insufficie­nt to identify THC-specific driving impairment, they wrote.

“Field sobriety tests are useful additions to overall evaluation­s of drivers, but are not accurate enough on their own to determine THC impairment,” Marcotte said. “New effective measures for identifyin­g cannabis impairment are needed to ensure the safety of all drivers on the road.”

The Center for Medicinal Cannabis Research has partnered with the California Department of Motor Vehicles and the California Highway Patrol on a followup study to test various methods of detecting cannabis-impaired driving. The study aims to recruit 300 participan­ts and is set to begin in late summer.

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