Thursday 13 December 2012

Spot saliva test a way to curb drugged drivers


A RIDE program. (QMI Agency)
A RIDE program. (QMI Agency)
We’ve all heard of roadside breathalyser tests when it comes to drinking and driving.
But spot saliva tests for drug use?
That’s the recommendation from two Western University legal experts who have tabled a study on drug use and driving for Mothers Against Drunk Driving (MADD) Canada.
Western law professors Erika Chamberlain and Robert Solomon claim that while the number of people driving while high on drugs is up, enforcement is lax when it comes to charging people with impaired driving because drug use is often hard to prove.
“You have more and more young people admitting to driving after drug use, not just after consuming alcohol,” said Chamberlain.
“I don’t think people realize that this is a growing problem,” said Chamberlain.
Already used in Australia and some European cities, roadside saliva tests are a quick and easy way to check for drugs, Chamberlain said.
Just like a breathalyzer, which detects the driver’s blood alcohol level, the saliva test would be used to test targeted drugs and the amount in the driver’s system.
While it’s likely going to be a few years before we see roadside saliva tests as frequently as we see drunk driving blitzes, Chamberlain said, drug-impaired driving is not an issue the government can ignore.
“It’s just going to become a greater and greater problem,” she said.
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BY THE NUMBERS
500 — Officers in Canada qualified to conduct DREs.
$17,000 — Cost to train each officer.
— Officers in the London police force trained in DRE.
65,183 — Impaired driving charges laid in Canada in 2010.
915 — Of those impaired charges were for drug-impaired driving.
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WHAT’S RECOMMENDED
A roadside saliva test administered by police officers to screen drivers suspected of being high on drugs while behind the wheel.
HOW IT WORKS
  • The test would be similar to ones used in the Australian state of Victoria, where police officers are able to demand a saliva sample from any driver at the roadside.
  • The driver uses a swab to provide a saliva sample and if it tests positive for any of the targeted drugs, the driver must accompany police and take a second test, which is sent to a lab to be analyzed.
  • If that test is also positive the driver is charged.
  • For the system to work, the government would have to establish a specific amount for each of the drugs targeted that would mean the driver was in fact “high” at the time of the test, because some drugs can stay in a person’s body long after the impairing affects have worn off.
SKEPTICISM
While DREs accurately determine if a person has drugs in their system, the courts remain skeptical about the link between the presence of drugs in a driver’s system and impairment because some drugs can stay in a person’s body long after the effects have worn off.
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ENFORCEMENT NOW
Under the Criminal Code, it’s difficult for police officers to determine if someone is driving while high. If an officer suspects someone is driving while impaired by drugs they can administer a physical co-ordination test before launching a multi-step Drug Recognition Evaluation (DRE), a process designed to reveal whether a driver is impaired by one of the seven classes of frequently abused drugs — depressants, inhalants, phencyclidine, cannabis, stimulants, hallucinogens and narcotics.
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WHO’S DRIVING HIGH?
  • Over the last decade, driving while high on drugs has become more common in Canada.
  • A 2007 Health Canada study found that nearly 40% of people ages 15 to 24 reported driving within two hours of using cannabis, compared with the 20% that reported driving after drinking alcohol.
  • A 2011 study comparing alcohol and drug use among fatally injured drivers from the Canadian Centre on Substance Abuse found one-third of the drivers had drugs in their system.
  • Unlike drunk drivers who tend to be more prevalent at night and on weekends, drug-positive drivers are spread relatively evenly across days of the week.

See our Australian Standard Saliva Tests 


Phone: 1300 660 636


By Alex Weber, The London Free Press

Original Article http://www.lfpress.com/2012/11/28/spot-saliva-test-a-way-to-curb-drugged-drivers


2 comments:

  1. Drug laws in Australia distinguish between those who use drugs and those who supply or traffic drugs.The Federal Customs Act covers the importing of drugs, and each state has its own laws governing the manufacture, possession, distribution and use of drugs, both legal and illegal.
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