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Marijuana-Using Drivers Are Better Drivers, Research Suggests: Anti-Drug Activists Harsh That Mellow With Retort

Categories: Marijuana

Thumbnail image for cheech chong smoke lowrider.jpg
Seeing as L.A. is the marijuana dispensary capital of the world, it also must be the stoned-driving (DWS) epicenter of America as well. Right?

Well, it's that kind of thinking that got a widely publicized paper on smoking weed and getting behind the wheel in trouble. The research sort of suggests that accidents were reduced in pot-legal states like California because people replace drinking with getting stoned (and either drive better or drive less).

Not so fast, say critics. One doesn't necessarily lead to the other:

The Community Anti-Drug Coalitions of America isn't buying it (and the Huffington Post reports that even the White House Office of National Drug Control Policy is expected to weigh in.

The coalitions says ...

... the authors contend that medical marijuana laws cause people to drink less and therefore not drive drunk. This is most certainly a spurious and coincidental relationship, however, as a large body of data points to other reasons why we have witnessed historic reductions in road fatalities over the last 20 years.

The group says that "crash fatalities were already coming down far before the introduction of medical marijuana."

The German research (PDF) says that "traffic fatalities fall by nearly 9 percent after the legalization of medical marijuana" and hypothesizes:

... It is possible that legalizing medical marijuana reduces traffic fatalities though its effect on substance use in public. Alcohol is often consumed in restaurants and bars, while many states prohibit the use of medical marijuana in public. Even where it is not explicitly prohibited, anecdotal evidence suggests that the public use of medical marijuana can be controversial.

If marijuana consumption typically takes place at home, then designating a
driver for the trip back from a restaurant or bar becomes unnecessary, and legalization could reduce traffic fatalities even if driving under the influence of marijuana is every bit as dangerous as driving under the influence of alcohol.

Ah yes, the stoned-in theory (scratches chin).

The paper inspired Time magazine to declare:

States that legalize medical marijuana see fewer fatal car accidents, according to a new study, in part because people may be substituting marijuana smoking for drinking alcohol.

The Anti-Drug Coalitions begs to differ and argues that research clearly shows "marijuana use was linked to heightened risk of crash involvement."

Another study, however, found that stoned drivers might tend to go slower and operate more deliberately -- and thus be safer.

We like that theory. And you can never discount the effectiveness of on-the-road paranoia. They're out to get ya, so drive carefully.

[@dennisjromero / djromero@laweekly.com / @LAWeeklyNews]


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8 comments
Brandt Hardin
Brandt Hardin

Marijuana is the safest drug with actual benefits for theuser as opposed to alcohol which is dangerous, causes addiction, birth defects,and affects literally every organ in the body. Groups are organizing all over the country to speak their minds onreforming pot laws.  I drew up a verycool poster featuring Uncle Willie Nelson and The Teapot Party for the causewhich you can check out on my artist’s blog at http://dregstudiosart.blogspot...  Drop in and let me know what you think!

maxpost
maxpost

More than just the liquor interests have something to lose if the good news about cannabis-related trafic-accident-reduction turns out to be true.

Binge-drinking plays into the hands of Big Tobackgo because

(a) some kids who have imbibed too much may follow advice to have "a cigarette or two" to clear their mind so they can drive the dar "safely" home (uh oh);

(b) some may find that "a cigarette or two" lessens the discomfort of hangover;

(c) :a cigarette or two" may help someone stay awake all night (a few days after the drinking party) studying for the Big Test.

Before you know it, a kid is hooked for life-- on nicotine.

Does the above argument suggest why big cigarette companies don't want to see cannabis or anything else cause alcohol consumption rates to go down?

jontomas
jontomas

Many people think marijuana consumption causes accidents like alcohol. It doesn't, for various reasons. Research has shown marijuana is not as intoxicating as alcohol. More importantly, while alcohol drinkers think they are better drivers and so drive faster and more aggressively, marijuana consumers are very aware of their altered consciousness and correctly judge when they are too impaired to drive - refraining from doing so. If they must, they correctly compensate for their altered state by driving slower and more cautiously.

The point is, judgement is not affected like it is with alcohol. Marijuana consumers simply don't put themselves or others in harm's way. This is why marijuana is NOT a significant cause of auto accidents.

Justin George
Justin George

LOL. ''This is most certainly a spurious and coincidental relationship, however, as a large body of data points to other reasons why''   ...Yes there are many factors that could present a drop in alcohol sales, but we would assume that they would be present from neighboring state to neighboring state instead of the common factor of MMJ seeming to be the distinguishing mark.

What I really found humorous from reading the report (the actual thing not the articles written about it) is that it was the ALCOHOL companies that noticed it first. They saw the trend years ago. 

So people who want to ignore this pot-alcohol correlation can come up with alternative conclusions until they are blue in the face, but the fact still remains that the people who fully believed it and recognized it first were the ones who least wanted it to be true. It wasn't a bunch of pot smokers who fabricated this cause-and-effect. It was the alcohol companies who noticed a dip in their profits every time a state legalized medical marijuana.

Now that we have firmly put down your dangerous driving argument with pure logic and statistics, what is the next ''demonweed'' myth you have for us to shoot down?

You can't keep up a lie forever. Although it is almost funny to see how hard you'll try.

jontomas
jontomas

Many people think marijuana consumption causes accidents like alcohol. It doesn't, for various reasons. Research has shown marijuana is not as intoxicating as alcohol. More importantly, while alcohol drinkers think they are better drivers and so drive faster and more aggressively, marijuana consumers are very aware of their altered consciousness and correctly judge when they are too impaired to drive - refraining from doing so. If they must, they correctly compensate for their altered state by driving slower and more cautiously.

The point is, judgement is not affected like it is with alcohol. Marijuana consumers simply don't put themselves or others in harm's way. This is why marijuana is NOT a significant cause of auto accidents.

Marijuana and Driving: A Review of the Scientific Evidence

http://norml.org/index.cfm?Gro...

pfroehlich2004
pfroehlich2004

It is true that traffic fatality rates have ben declining in all states since well before the passage of medical marijuana laws. This fact does not, however, contradict the study's findings.

The relevant fact is that traffic fatality rates have fallen FASTER in states with medical marijuana laws than in those without them. Of the ten states which had legalized medical marijuana by 2004, seven experienced declines in their motor vehicle fatality rates which EXCEEDED the national average. Only Alaska, Maine, and Montana experienced declines which were less than the national average.

Do traffic deaths decline when people substitute marijuana for alcohol? Maybe and maybe not, but it's abundantly clear that increasing legal access to marijuana does not result in increased traffic fatalities.

My data can be confirmed here:http://www-fars.nhtsa.dot.gov/...

jontomas
jontomas

Many people think marijuana consumption causes accidents like alcohol. It doesn't, for various reasons. Research has shown marijuana is not as intoxicating as alcohol. More importantly, while alcohol drinkers think they are better drivers and so drive faster and more aggressively, marijuana consumers are very aware of their altered consciousness and correctly judge when they are too impaired to drive - refraining from doing so. If they must, they correctly compensate for their altered state by driving slower and more cautiously.

The point is, judgement is not affected like it is with alcohol. Marijuana consumers simply don't put themselves or others in harm's way. This is why marijuana is NOT a significant cause of auto accidents.

Marijuana and Driving: A Review of the Scientific Evidence

http://norml.org/index.cfm?Gro...

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