Increasing Marijuana Use Impairs Driving and Causes Other Problems

using marijuana while driving

It’s bad enough that teens are smoking marijuana at the highest rate in thirty years, outnumbering even those that smoke cigarettes, but they are often willing to drive after doing so constituting a very dangerous combination.

A new study by Liberty Mutual Insurance and Students Against Destructive Decisions (SADD) showed that more than a third of teens are confident that smoking weed has no effect on them when they drive. It’s no surprise then that about one in five teens reported that they had driven after smoking marijuana. The same numbers of teens think that alcohol doesn’t have a negative effect on driving.

These figures provide an estimate of how much work still needs to be done to protect our young people. When young people have inaccurate perceptions of the effects of drugs or drinking and driving or other demanding activities, they can easily put themselves and others at risk.

The Actual Effects Of Marijuana On Driving

The National Highway Traffic Safety Administration (NHTSA) catalogs the effects of using marijuana and how a smoker performs in tasks similar to driving. They state that the performance-related effects of using marijuana or other cannabis products are:

  • Problems with memory or learning
  • Distorted perceptions including time and distance
  • Difficulty solving problems
  • Loss of coordination
  • Difficulty sustaining attention
  • Difficulty shifting attention to track with changes in the environment
  • Impairment of hand-eye coordination.

These effects have been said to last two to four hours. The NHTSA states that there are still traces of these effects 24 hours later.

Drug Use Impairs Understanding of the Danger

car crash

Since marijuana impairs memory, judgment, and perception, a person may be unable to drive safely and not also be able to perceive the problem. In confirmation of this fact, the British Medical Journal stated that the chances that a marijuana smoker will get into an accident are three times that of a sober person if they drive within three hours of smoking pot. While some other studies disagree with this result, the Washington Post reported that in 2011, the number of fatal car accidents involving teens increased in the first half of that year.

The Narconon Program Offers A Lasting Solution

According to the Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration, nearly two million are admitted to rehabs that receive public funding each year. More go to private facilities. The tragedy is that many of these rehabs fail to provide the service that enables people to live drug-free. Some programs are so short that the person does not have the time to rebuild a broken life. Many programs count their successes by the number of people who stay on methadone or buprenorphine for months or more likely years. But these people never have the chance to learn to live drug-free.

Through the Narconon program, people who had lost everything that was valuable as a result of addiction are able to rebuild, recover their self-esteem and integrity, and learn to operate with honesty once again. The Narconon program can help someone you love to climb back out of the despair of addiction and into a sober, productive life once again. Contact us to find a center near you.


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AUTHOR

Sue Birkenshaw

Sue has worked in the addiction field with the Narconon network for three decades. She has developed and administered drug prevention programs worldwide and worked with numerous drug rehabilitation centers over the years. Sue is also a fine artist and painter, who enjoys traveling the world which continues to provide unlimited inspiration for her work. You can follow Sue on Twitter, or connect with her on LinkedIn.