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Anti Federalist
04-19-2016, 09:19 PM
State asks UCSD to find ways to detect stoned drivers

http://www.sandiegouniontribune.com/news/2016/apr/17/ucsd-marijuana-sobrietytest/

UC San Diego will try to develop a faster, better way to determine whether drivers are high on marijuana through a study prompted by the possibility that California voters will approve the recreational use of pot in November.

The $1.8 million project was commissioned by the Legislature, which said sobriety tests currently used by law enforcement aren’t ideal for spotting drivers impaired by marijuana.

Researchers at the university plan to use driving simulators to study people’s behavior while they’re high on pot and formulate sobriety exercises that motorists would have to pass on a hand-held device, such as an iPad.

Studies of this type are uncommon in the United States.

The federal government classifies marijuana as a Schedule 1 drug, meaning that it has no accepted medical use and possesses a high potential for abuse. As a result of this categorization, scientists said it can take as long as 18 months to obtain federally sanctioned marijuana for research.

But the government is under pressure to reclassify marijuana because studies of pot have identified some clear medicinal benefits. Nationally, there also has been growing societal acceptance of the drug for medical and recreational uses.

Political experts said a measure to legalize recreational marijuana in California is likely to qualify for the Nov. 8 ballot, and the prospect of the nation’s most populous state approving that measure is raising questions about everything from “drugged driving” to where pot would be sold. Such issues haven’t been fully resolved, even though California voters approved medical marijuana in 1996.

“We’re not trying to punish people; we’re trying to prevent accidents,” Assemblyman Tom Lackey, R-Palmdale, who was a California Highway Patrol officer for 28 years, said of the sobriety-screening project at UC San Diego.

“We need roadside tools that detect whether a driver is impaired by marijuana. This program could have national implications,” he added.

At present, law-enforcement officers in the state have other options for assessing whether a driver has been impaired by marijuana.

They can administer a field sobriety test, which requires drivers to perform certain physical and mental tasks including standing on one leg and counting backward. That evaluation method has proven to be very useful in identifying people who have been drinking alcohol, but scientists said it doesn’t always reveal whether a person is high on pot.

In some cases, an officer can subject a motorist to a blood test, which can reveal the presence of THC, the main active ingredient in marijuana. But this analysis doesn’t gauge exactly when a person used the drug, and the level of THC doesn’t necessarily correlate to how high an individual is.

The UC San Diego study will aim to help clarify matters.

“We want to be able to determine if a motorist is impaired by marijuana, how impaired they are and how long that impairment will last,” said Igor Grant, chair of psychiatry at the university and director of the Center for Medicinal Cannabis Research.

“We also would like to measure the strength of the marijuana and how the potency relates to impairment,” he added.

One of Grant’s colleagues, psychiatry professor Thomas Marcotte, said: “The ultimate goal is to find a way to determine if a motorist is impaired by marijuana by examining various body fluids (blood, saliva, breath) and cognitive testing that could be done at the roadside.”

Barth Wilsey, a UC San Diego physician who is also involved in the study, said “People tend to experience distorted time and have problems with memory when stoned. We aim to see whether these and other marijuana-related impairments might be detectable with tests on an iPad that could be used in the field by law-enforcement officers.”

Danke
04-19-2016, 09:56 PM
"UC San Diego will try to develop a faster..."

Maybe dannno can sneak into their labs some night and destroy the data and equipment.

phill4paul
04-20-2016, 06:32 AM
They can administer a field sobriety test, which requires drivers to perform certain physical and mental tasks including standing on one leg and counting backward. That evaluation method has proven to be very useful in identifying people who have been drinking alcohol, but scientists said it doesn’t always reveal whether a person is high on pot.

Umm, begs the question, what does it matter if they are high if they can perform certain physical and mental tasks?

otherone
04-20-2016, 04:19 PM
Umm, begs the question, what does it matter if they are high if they can perform certain physical and mental tasks?

LOL. That was my response.
"Impairment" is only of consequence if the "impaired" violates a traffic law. If the officers wish to see evidence of impairment, then they need to SEE evidence of impairment. it's interesting that what they find consequential is a state of being instead of an actual behavior.

dannno
04-20-2016, 04:42 PM
It sounds like what they have been finding, and I would argue that what they will continue to find is that it takes a LOT of cannabis to realize any significant impairments that can be tested for.

I can probably pass more impairment tests while high than most people can while sober..

Of course, cannabis is like alcohol in that the more you use, the more impaired you get.. it is possible to get high enough to where you probably don't want to drive, especially if you are a more inexperienced user. But you never will be as impaired as you can be with a significant amount of alcohol. Alcohol actually changes the viscosity of the fluid in your ears and makes it so you can't balance. That's why drunk drivers swerve around. High drivers tend to drive straight and calm, and cannabis doesn't really do much to impair motor skills or reaction times.

luctor-et-emergo
04-20-2016, 04:45 PM
“We also would like to measure the strength of the marijuana and how the potency relates to impairment,” he added.

GOOD LUCK.

tod evans
04-20-2016, 04:47 PM
This is all about money, it's got nothing to do with impairment...

pcosmar
04-20-2016, 06:36 PM
This is all about money, it's got nothing to do with impairment...

Of course not. There is no impairment.

phill4paul
04-20-2016, 06:42 PM
This is all about money, it's got nothing to do with impairment...


Of course not. There is no impairment.

What the hell do you two mal-contents have against law and order?