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Open AccessJournal ArticleDOI

Epidemiology of drug driving: protocol from a national Canadian study measuring levels of cannabis, alcohol and other substances in injured drivers.

TLDR
“left-over” blood taken as part of routine medical care is used to quantify cannabis and other drugs in non-fatally injured drivers who present to participating emergency departments after a collision to monitor the prevalence and pattern of drug use in injured drivers across Canada.
Abstract
Drug driving is an emerging global road safety problem. As the prevalence of alcohol-impaired driving decreases, and as more jurisdictions decriminalize or legalize cannabis, it is increasingly important for policy makers to have accurate information on the prevalence and pattern of drug driving. Unfortunately, this data is not widely available and the World Health Organization identifies lack of accurate data on the prevalence of drug driving as an important knowledge gap. In this paper, we discuss the limitations of current methods of monitoring drug use in drivers. We then present a novel methodology from a multi-centre study that monitors the prevalence and pattern of drug use in injured drivers across Canada. This study uses “left-over” blood taken as part of routine medical care to quantify cannabis and other drugs in non-fatally injured drivers who present to participating emergency departments after a collision. Toxicology testing is done with waiver of consent as we have procedures that prevent results from being linked to any individual. These methods minimize non-response bias and have the advantages of measuring drug concentrations in blood obtained shortly after a collision. Our methods can be applied in other jurisdictions and provide a consistent approach to collect data on drug driving. Consistent methods allow comparison of drug driving prevalence from different regions. Data from this research can be used to inform policies designed to prevent driving under the influence of cannabis and other impairing drugs.

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Journal ArticleDOI

The Statistics of Canada

Journal ArticleDOI

Cannabis and Driving

TL;DR: In this paper, a review of current information linking cannabis to motor vehicle accidents and examine patterns of cannabis-impairment of driving related behaviors, their time courses, relationship to cannabis dose and THC blood levels, and compare cannabis and alcohol-impaired driving patterns directly.
Journal ArticleDOI

Cannabis Legalization and Detection of Tetrahydrocannabinol in Injured Drivers

TL;DR: In this paper , the authors studied drivers treated after a motor vehicle collision in four British Columbia trauma centers, with data from January 2013 through March 2020, and calculated the prevalence of all outcomes before and after legalization.

Comparison of drug concentrations between whole blood and oral fluid

TL;DR: The relationship of drug concentrations between oral fluid and whole blood was evaluated by studying the linear correlation of concentrations and calculating the oral fluid to blood concentration ratios (OF/B) for different substances as mentioned in this paper.
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Identification of cannabinoids in post-mortem blood samples from the province of New Brunswick before and after recreational cannabis legalization.

TL;DR: In this paper , a retrospective chart review was conducted on all adult Coroner's cases with toxicology analysis in New Brunswick between January 2014 and May 2020 (n = 3060), and differences in the proportion of cannabinoid-positive samples pre- versus post-legalization in the overall cohort and within each demographic parameter were assessed using chi-square tests.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Global status report on road safety.

Tamitza Toroyan
- 01 Aug 2009 - 
TL;DR: The World Health Organization has just released the Global status report on road safety —the first broad assessment that describes the road safety situation in 178 countries, using data drawn from a standardised survey, providing a benchmark that countries can use to assess their road safety position relative to other countries.
Journal ArticleDOI

The Statistics of Canada

Journal ArticleDOI

Modeling causes of death: an integrated approach using CODEm

TL;DR: The utility of CODEm for the estimation of several major causes of death is demonstrated and it is shown that it produces better estimates of cause of death trends than previous methods and is less susceptible to bias in model specification.
Journal ArticleDOI

Risk of road accident associated with the use of drugs: a systematic review and meta-analysis of evidence from epidemiological studies.

TL;DR: There was a tendency for the estimated effects of drug use on accident risk to be smaller in well-controlled studies than in poorly controlled studies, and evidence of publication bias was found for some drugs.
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