After states legalized
medical marijuana, traffic deaths fell
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[December 29, 2016]
By Ronnie Cohen
(Reuters Health) - Legalization of medical
marijuana is not linked with increased traffic fatalities, a new study
finds. In some states, in fact, the number of people killed in traffic
accidents dropped after medical marijuana laws were enacted.
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“Instead of seeing an increase in fatalities, we saw a reduction,
which was totally unexpected,” said Julian Santaella-Tenorio, the
study’s lead author and a doctoral student at Columbia University’s
Mailman School of Public Health in New York City.
Since 1996, 28 states have legalized marijuana for medical use.
Deaths dropped 11 percent on average in states that legalized
medical marijuana, researchers discovered after analyzing 1.2
million traffic fatalities nationwide from 1985 through 2014.
The decrease in traffic fatalities was particularly striking – 12
percent – in 25- to 44-year-olds, an age group with a large
percentage of registered medical marijuana users, the authors report
in the American Journal of Public Health.
Though Santaella-Tenorio was surprised by the drop in traffic
deaths, the results mirror the findings of another study of data
from 19 states published in 2013 in The Journal of Law and
Economics. It showed an 8 to 11 percent decrease in traffic
fatalities during the first full year after legalization of medical
marijuana.
“Public safety doesn’t decrease with increased access to marijuana,
rather it improves,” Benjamin Hansen, one of the authors of the
previous study, said in an email. Hansen, an economics professor at
the University of Oregon in Eugene, was not involved in the current
study.
He cautioned that both marijuana and alcohol are drugs that can
impair driving.
It’s not clear why traffic deaths might drop when medical marijuana
becomes legal, and the study can only show an association; it can’t
prove cause and effect.
The authors of both studies suggest that marijuana users might be
more aware of their impairment as a result of the drug than
drinkers. It’s also possible, they say, that patients with access to
medical marijuana have substituted weed at home for booze in bars
and have stayed off the roads.
Or, they suggest, the drop in traffic fatalities could stem from
other factors, such as an increased police presence following
enactment of medical marijuana laws.
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Law-enforcement authorities have yet to devise a way to test drivers
for marijuana intoxication, and have raised concerns about drivers
high on cannabis.
Though traffic deaths dropped following legalization of medical
marijuana laws in seven states, fatality rates rose in Rhode Island
and Connecticut, the study found.
California immediately cut traffic deaths by 16 percent following
medical marijuana legalization and then saw a gradual increase, the
study found. Researchers saw a similar trend in New Mexico, with an
immediate reduction of more than 17 percent followed by an increase.
The findings highlight differences in various states’ medical
marijuana laws and indicate the need for research on the
particularities of how localities have implemented them,
Santaella-Tenorio said.
Voters in Denver, Colorado approved a November ballot measure to
allow public consumption of marijuana, Hansen noted. But, he said,
“We don’t know the public health consequences of those types of
policy changes yet.”
SOURCE: http://bit.ly/2igtabO American Journal of Public Health,
online December 20, 2016.
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