Pubdate: Tue, 20 Jan 1998 Source: The Examiner (Ireland) Contact: Letters to the Editor DRIVE SAFELY WITH CANNABIS Chief Supt John O'Brien, of the Garda Traffic Policy Bureau, is quoted as saying that: "People are driving while on cannabis. That is happening but it would be impossible for us to quantify the level of the problem at the moment." (The Examiner, January 8). Why does Mr O'Brien assume that driving under the influence of cannabis is a problem? I wonder if he is aware of the fact that cannabis does not actually affect driving performance? I must admit that it came as a surprise to me to read the relevant research, but the indications are that cannabis actually makes people safer drivers. This appears to be due to the fact that they are aware that they are stoned and actually concentrate more on their driving. This is in sharp contrast to people who have consumed a small amount of alcohol, who do not actually realise that their performance may have been affected. I would refer Mr O'Brien to tests performed in Holland on behalf of the US Dept of Transportation, in which subjects smoked as much as three times the normal dose of cannabis. It was found that their driving skills suffered no significant deterioration, even in subjects who had not smoked cannabis before. In the case of a similar group, who were given alcohol instead of cannabis, their driving skills were markedly affected for the worse. "These (findings) support both the common belief that drivers become overconfident after drinking alcohol (and) that they become more cautious and self-critical after consuming (smoking) marijuana." (Crancer Study, Washington Department of Motor Vehicles; US Department of Transportation, National Highway Traffic Safety Administration (DOT HS 808 078), Final Report, November 1993) The earlier US "Jamaican Study" of 1974, concluded that cannabis caused "no impairment of physiological, sensory and perceptual performance, tests of concept formation, abstracting ability, and cognitive style, and tests of memory." (Goode, Erich. "Effects of Cannabis in Another Culture." Science Magazine: July 1975.) Cannabis is actually a safe drug. The only real danger from its use is due to the very fact that it is illegal. There is to be a vote in the European Parliament calling for the legalisation of soft drugs. Such a change in the law would probably lead to a reduction in the harm caused by these drugs, and I hope the vote is successful. Researchers are welcome at http://www.druglibrary.org - a website which contains an extensive on-line collection of official drugs-related documents. Yours sincerely, Martin Cooke Corcormick Drumkeerin Co Leitrim