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Marijuana And Dui Laws:


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Marijuana and DUI Laws: How Can We Best Guard Against Impaired Driving?

 

How do laws against driving under the influence of marijuana work?

 

Blood testing seems to be the only reliable method to determine the actual level of THC in the body, since urine tests cannot show that a person has recently used marijuana. Depending on quantity and strength, a single dose of THC produces metabolites in urine that last for at least 12 days — long after the psychoactive effects of the substance have worn off.[1] However, the key is not necessarily to know the exact level of THC in a driver?s bloodstream, but whether or not the person is impaired and thus incapable of safely operating a motor vehicle.

 

What is the threshold for considering a driver to be impaired by marijuana?

 

It is unclear what blood level of THC (the main psychoactive ingredient in marijuana) constitutes actual impairment. Most credible scientists working on the issue acknowledge the difficulty of pegging THC impairment to a number (in a way similar to drunk driving laws), and epidemiological evidence on the risk of accidents associated with marijuana is much less conclusive than data regarding alcohol.

 

The most meaningful recent study measuring driver "culpability" (i.e., who is at fault) in 3,400 crashes over a 10–year period indicated that drivers with THC concentrations of less than five ng/mL in their blood have a crash risk no higher than that of drug–free users.[2] The crash risk begins to rise above the risk for sober drivers when a marijuana user's THC concentrations in whole blood3 reach five to 10 ng/mL.

 

How long does it take for the psychoactive effects of marijuana to wear off?

 

Because smoked THC is rapidly transferred into the blood stream, THC levels in the blood rise quickly immediately after inhalation. Depending on the dose, THC typically reaches peak concentrations of more than 100 ng/mL five to 10 minutes after inhalation and then rapidly decreases to between one and four ng/mL within three to four hours.

 

However, the blood serum of moderate to heavy marijuana users may contain more than two ng/mL of THC at 24 or even 48 hours after smoking a single joint, a level that studies have shown does not produce impairment.[4]

 

This is a particular concern for medical marijuana patients who are using marijuana in compliance with state laws and their doctors' advice, but who would likely test positive for marijuana while sober.

 

Additionally, several studies show that exposure to secondhand marijuana smoke (which could result from being in the same room with a person who is using marijuana) may cause the non–user to show THC concentrations in blood serum of several nanograms per milliliter.[6]

 

Does this mean that some DUID laws may actually criminalize sober drivers?

 

Yes, depending on the threshold of THC that the law sets. Furthermore, arresting and convicting motorists who only have traces of marijuana metabolites in their systems (from having used marijuana days before) will certainly cause people who are completely sober to be arrested and wrongly convicted of driving under the influence of drugs.

 

The standard for scientists is to test blood and urine, but what about other bodily fluids, like saliva, or performance–based tests?

 

Because of the invasiveness of blood tests and the inadequacy of urine tests in determining impairment on the roadside (i.e., actual THC levels), police officials hope to institute roadside saliva testing in the near future. However, the technology for reliably testing saliva is still unavailable, and there are no national standards for testing saliva, as there are with blood and urine.

 

Significant work is being done to develop and implement modified field sobriety tests, which measure the behavior of drivers (reaction time, for example) rather than their bodily fluids.

 

MPP recommends a policy similar to most state laws on driving under the influence of alcohol: A driver who fails a roadside sobriety test should be required to submit to a blood test by a trained medical professional — or risk criminal and administrative sanctions.

 

 

1. B. Law, et al., "Forensic aspects of the metabolism and excretion of cannabinoids following oral ingestion of cannabis resin," Journal of Pharmacy and Pharmacology, 1984. 36(5), pp. 289–94.

 

2. O.H. Drummer, et al., "The involvement of drugs in drivers of motor vehicles killed in Australian road traffic crashes," Accident Analysis and Prevention, 2004. 36, pp. 239–48.

 

3. "When reporting THC levels in blood or adopting legal limits one must always specify the reference fluid … For THC, concentrations measured in whole blood are typically 1.6–2.2 times lower than those measured in blood or plasma. For example, 5 ng/mL of THC in whole blood correspond to about 10 ng/mL in serum or plasma." (F. Grotenhermen, et al., "Testing for Impairment by Cannabis," 2004.)

 

4. G. Skopp, et al., "Serum cannabinoid levels 24 to 48 hours after cannabis smoking," Archiv fur Kriminologie [German publication], 2003. 212(3–4), pp. 83–95.

 

5. Huestis, et al., “Absorption of THC and formation of 11-OH-THC and THC-COOH during and after smoking marijuana,” Journal of Analytical Toxicology, 1992. 16, pp. 276-82.

 

6. E.J. Cone, et al., “Contact highs and urinary cannabinoid excretion after passive exposure to marijuana smoke,” Clinical Pharmacology and Therapeutics, 1986. 40, pp. 247–256.

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