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"The Effects of Marijuana on Car Accidents"
Is cannabis-impaired driving a public health and safety concern?
Well, the number of tickets went up for cannabis-impaired driving
in Washington State after legalization, and the proportion of drivers
in fatal car crashes in Colorado who tested positive went up.
But in both cases, this may simply reflect the general increase
in marijuana use overall.
It doesn't mean the cannabis is causing the crashes.
Yeah, there's lots of evidence correlating marijuana use with car accidents.
But you have to ask yourself who uses marijuana?
Mostly young people and males.
And guess who has higher crash risk regardless of what they smoke?
Young people and males.
But taking that into account, it does seem that roughly 20 to 30%
of traffic crashes involving cannabis use occur because of the cannabis use.
To put that in perspective, though, that number is more like
85% when it comes to alcohol.
Yeah, but are the cannabis crashes just low velocity fender bender
bumps from some wasted driver going like five miles an hour?
After a systematic review of the literature, this compilation of studies
examining acute cannabis consumption and motor vehicle collisions
“found a near doubling of risk of a driver being involved
in a motor vehicle collision resulting in serious injury or death.”
So, that's pretty serious; though again, alcohol is even worse.
Yes, cannabis may double or triple the risk of car crashes,
but alcohol may multiply the risk like 6 to 15-fold.
The combo may be worse, though;
25 times the odds of fatal car crash involvement testing positive for both.
The safety consequence of cannabis intoxication when driving
is listed as a primary concern about cannabis legalization.
OK, well what happened in the states where marijuana was legalized?
How much did traffic fatalities go up?
They didn't. In fact, they went down. What?
Why does legalizing pot reduce traffic fatalities?
Because of reduced alcohol consumption.
They found that legalization of weed was associated
with reduced alcohol consumption; so yes, more drugged driving,
but less drunk driving— and that's so much worse,
that overall, fatalities went down.
So, perhaps we'd also see less liver disease,
less alcohol-induced brain damage,
as pot substitutes for some of the alcohol use.
Cannabis is unlikely to produce as much harm as alcohol
because, unlike alcohol, cannabis does not cause liver
or gastrointestinal diseases, not fatal in overdoses,
and does not appear as neurotoxic as alcohol,
and it's not as potent a cause of car crashes as alcohol, either.
The health problems of cannabis dependence,
like bronchitis and memory impairment, are much less serious,
on average, than those suffering from alcohol dependence.
But this does not mean that cannabis dependence is a minor problem,
but public health authorities can be criticized for bringing that up.
It's like in the 40s and 50s after the repeal of prohibition,
you still need to warn people about the problems of
heavy drinking, liver cirrhosis, alcoholism,
but you'd just get dismissed as some temperance propagandist.
And now we see a similar thing, where the public health profession
wants to educate people about the adverse health effects
of cannabis, but are dismissed as reefer madness hysterics.
Still, it's important to put these adverse health effects in perspective.
How does the safety of cannabis stack up against alcohol and tobacco?
According to the CDC, alcohol is linked to approximately
88,000 deaths per year, whereas the deaths due to cannabis
are from things like car accidents, and they go down
when more people smoke pot because alcohol is so much worse.
With hindsight, we can clearly see the enormous problems
that have been caused by the legal drugs—tobacco and alcohol.
If asked to decide today which psychoactive drugs should be legal,
cannabis might well be much higher on the list.