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Wednesday, January 17, 2007

Big news -- Dennis Kucinich to oversee the Drug Czar

Scott Morgan has the story. This is potentially very exciting.

9:25:37 PM |   | Links | permalink | comment []


Marijuana and driving... plus bad reporting and bad science

Those of you who have followed this blog for awhile know that I've been very interested in the evidence regarding the dangers of marijuana and driving. This is an important issue -- particularly when it comes to the topic of marijuana legalization/criminalization. Prohibitionists point to the supposed dangers of intoxicated driving as reason to oppose legalization (whether relevant or not) and also use the stoned-driver bogeyman to push for zero-tolerance driving laws that are based simply on the presence of cannabinoids -- a sneaky back-door means to criminalize marijuana use.

Of course, there's no doubt that marijuana use affects reaction and space/time perception. That's pretty much a given, and anyone who has smoked pot will confirm this. So it's reasonable to assume from that fact that marijuana and driving would be a very bad combination. And yet... and yet, the government has an exceptionally difficult time demonstrating that "fact." They turn to discredited "studies" or isolated anecdotes about some tragic accident involving a stoned driver (where it usually turns out the driver was also high on a dozen other drugs).

The truth is, and studies have confirmed this (see U.S. National Highway Safety Administration (1993), Dutch study (1994), Australian study (1998), Transport Research Laboratory (2000 and 2001)), most stoned drivers are much, much safer than drunk drivers and are even safer than tired drivers or drivers talking on cell phones. It's because pot makes people cautious (and sometimes a little paranoid). People who are stoned know that they are affected, and so they compensate by driving slower and focusing their entire energy on driving. Most pot smokers, when behind the wheel of a car, become old people. (Unlike many drinkers, who become reckless and believe themselves to be invincible.)

My own joke on the difference between a drunk driver and a stoned driver:
A drunk driver will speed through a stop sign without even noticing it, while a stoned driver will stop and patiently wait for it to turn green.
The fact that actual marijuana impairment is so hard to classify may be why there has been so little interest on the part of the government on researching a means of measuring a level of marijuana intoxication that would compare to Blood Alcohol Content levels. (That, and their desire to use cannabinoid presence to criminalize use.) Instead, the government has encouraged research into a variety of questionable drug-testing-in-relation-to-fatal-crash-statistic studies (many of which even fail to separate drivers from passengers).

So my attention was caught by this story from radio-canada that started out fairly dramatically:
U.S. drivers who tested positive for cannabis over a 10-year period had a 29 per cent higher risk of causing a fatal crash than motorists not taking the drug, a new Canadian-led study suggests.
Strong damning proof, or a mix of imprecise words and absolute rubbish?

Here's what the sentence implies:
  1. That drivers who tested positive for cannabis were somehow tracked over a 10 year period of their lives.
  2. That certain drivers were identified as causing fatal crashes
  3. That cannabis-positive drivers had a 29 percent higher rate than all other drivers.
I wrote to Michel Bédard, author of the study, and asked for some clarification. Turns out #1 is a actually bad wording; #2 is bad reporting of limited scientific data; #3 is simply false.
Me: Should it read "U.S. drivers who tested positive for cannabis over a 10-year period..." or "Over a 10-year period, U.S. drivers who tested positive for cannabis..." ... I'm guessing that it actually meant that the data covered 10 years, but that the instances of drug testing were relatively proximate to the crash.
Bédard: You are correct, we used data from 1993 to 2003 and the presence of cannabis was in relation to a given crash.

Me: How was it determined that the person who tested positive actually CAUSED the fatal crash?
Bédard: ... we cannot claim that the driver "caused" the crash but rather that there is an association between the presence of cannabis in the blood and making an unsafe driving action.

Me: The 29 per cent -- is that really a comparison between those who tested positive for cannabis and those who did not (which would include those who tested positive for alcohol but not cannabis), or is it a comparison between those who tested positive for cannabis and those who did not test positive for cannabis OR alcohol?
Bédard: All drivers tested negative for alcohol. The comparison was between those who tested positive or negative for cannabis in the absence of alcohol.
He was also nice enough to send me information from the abstract (the full study isn't yet available online).
We used a cross-sectional, case-control design with drivers aged 20-49 who were involved in a fatal crash in the United States from 1993 to 2003; drivers were included if they had been tested for the presence of cannabis and had a confirmed blood alcohol concentration of zero. Cases were drivers who had at least one potentially unsafe driving action recorded in relation to the crash (e.g., speeding); controls were drivers who had no such driving action recorded. We calculated the crude and adjusted odds ratios (ORs) of any potentially unsafe driving action in drivers who tested positive for cannabis but negative for alcohol consumption. In computing for the adjusted OR, we controlled for age, sex, and prior driving record.
So what do we have? First, all those who tested positive for alcohol were eliminated from the study, so the sample is dangerously skewed. Second, the best that they could do is identify drivers involved in fatal crashes that had been cited for something, with no information as to whether that related to the crash. If an alcohol impaired driver crashed into someone sober who used cannabis days earlier, and both drivers were cited for speeding, the drunk driver would not be included in the study, but the sober driver would be classified as positive for cannabis and having an unsafe driving action associated with a fatal crash. And even then, all we have is an association, not a cause. There could be many explanations that have nothing to do with cannabis impairment. The study tells us nothing useful, but it does feed the media feeding frenzy.

And while I appreciate Mr. Bédard's willingness to be candid with me about the study, he has contributed directly to misinformation through promoting the reults of a study with limited value, through his obvious bias, and through his imprecise and downright false communications with the press [from both the radio-canada article and here]:
"Those who tested positive for cannabis had 29 per cent more risk of having committed a driving action that led to the crash than those who did not," Bédard told CBC News.

"It tells us that cannabis is not a safe substitute for alcohol, and I especially mean that for young people," said Bédard. [...]

What he found was that those victims where THC was involved, were at greater risk when involved in an accident.

"Compared to people who have not tested positive for cannabis, or THC in this case, which is the metabolite we're looking at, people who did test positive have a 29 per cent higher risk." [...]

"The big thing is that cannabis is not a safe alternative to drinking when it comes to driving."
And once again, the prohibitionists fail to find their smoking gun.

9:10:50 PM |   | Links | permalink | comment []


Redefining moderate voters

Jessica Peck Corry writes in the Denver Post:
Reporters and politicos - so eager to define individual voters as liberal or conservative, Republican or Democrat - find themselves in a predicament: Most Colorado voters in the last election simply defied such categories.

In November's election, 41 percent of all voters supported legalizing marijuana, a number greater than the 40 percent who voted for GOP gubernatorial candidate Bob Beauprez. In all, 636,938 voters wanted marijuana legalized, 11,000 greater than the number who backed Beauprez.

While once considered a rallying cry of hippies and peaceniks, marijuana legalization is now a position supported by economics professors and family physicians.

... and people are starting to notice (although the media is sometimes behind on this)

Despite such widespread support, the media unanimously held that November's bid for bud fell flat, with headlines like "Pro-pot proposal takes a big hit" and "Marijuana amendment goes up in smoke." Beauprez's bid, on the other hand, was largely recorded as a casualty of a national trend where mid-term elections rarely see gains for the majority party

Her conclusions as to what the election results mean are, I think, most relevant to Colorado, and I don't think they can yet be extrapolated to the rest of the country as she does, but they're interesting:

The old categories may just not fit anymore. [...] This "Middle Majority" is growing, now representing closer to 40 percent of America. These individuals tend to have a vibrant libertarian streak while still maintaining conservative social values in their own lives. [...] Most in this group support legalization because they are tired of the government taking billions away from important priorities like education and health care, and instead frittering it away on a failed militarized drug war.


8:50:13 AM |   | Links | permalink | comment []


Marijuana decriminalization attempt in New Hampshire this morning

In the Nashua Telegraph:
A move to decriminalize the use of marijuana tops the agenda as the New Hampshire Legislature begins to hear from the public on its 1,400 bills for the 2007 session. [...]

"Despite the threat of severe penalties, many responsible, productive New Hampshire citizens continue to use marijuana. As long as these individuals do not harm others, we believe it is unwise and unjust to continue persecuting them as enemies of the state," the group declares.

Matt Simon of Amherst, the group's spokesman, said it had less than a week to prepare testimony in support, but will be ready.

"Six days isn't much time, but the evidence is on our side, and I know we will be able to make a compelling case for the committee," explained Simon.

"If the committee is willing to give this bill the serious consideration it merits, it will conclude that decriminalization is the only sensible solution to the slew of problems marijuana prohibition has created for New Hampshire."

The group contends laws against the use of marijuana only increase the incidence of violence and property crime.

Leaders with Law Enforcement Against Prohibition (LEAP) and the New Hampshire Liberty Alliance (NHLA) are also expected to offer support.

The three authors are a rare bipartisan mix led by liberal Keene Democrat Chuck Weed, conservative Haverhill Republican Paul Ingbretson, and Manchester Republican Steve Vaillancourt, who at other times has been a Democratic and Libertarian lawmaker.

Interesting group of bill authors. But I'm a bit surprised at the short notice -- it doesn't seem likely that it will do well, so the publicity surrounding the effort is the important part.

12:09:37 AM |   | Links | permalink | comment []






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There's a war going on. It destroys lives and families, spawns violence, suspends civil liberties, tramples on the infirm, locks up millions of peaceful citizens, costs billions, and subjugates reason with fear. This blog looks at the front lines of the drug war, with news, analysis, and the occasional rant.

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