One in five have "driven on drugs"

This section covers ALL drugs, from Heroin to pain Killers. General Gossip.

One in five have "driven on drugs"

Postby Andy284 » Fri Aug 02, 2013 5:09 am

Nearly one in five motorists has driven under the influence of illegal or prescription drugs, a survey suggests.
The study for comparison website Confused.com also indicated that the number of people convicted of drug-driving went down last year.

Seven per cent of the 2,000 motorists asked said they had driven under the influence of illegal drugs such as cannabis, cocaine or ecstasy.

Ministers are planning new laws next year to crack down on drug-drivers.

Medical advice
Twelve per cent of those surveyed said they had driven under the influence of drugs prescribed by their doctor.

These could include some painkillers or hay fever remedies that can make people drowsy.

More than half of those asked admitted that they did not always read the leaflet that comes with the medicine, which often gives advice on whether people should drive.

BBC transport correspondent Richard Westcott said the survey was one of several over recent years that suggest drug-driving is a problem.

The government said it was getting tough on drug driving, promising that legislation planned for next year would save hundreds of lives and could land thousands of drivers caught under the influence of drugs with a large fine or even a prison sentence.

The plans to make it easier to prosecute people who drive under the influence of drugs in England and Wales were unveiled by the government last month.

Low limits

The proposals would introduce a new offence of driving with a drug in the body, above a certain limit.

Ministers said the legislation would remove the difficulty of proving a driver was impaired by drugs, which is the case at the moment.

The government proposes including eight illegal drugs - cannabis, ecstasy, cocaine, ketamine, benzoylecgonine (primary metabolite of cocaine), methamphetamine, LSD and 6-monoacetylmorphine (heroin and diamorphine), for which allowable limits would be set very low.

And it is proposing higher limits for eight other controlled drugs that have medical uses.

These are clonazepam, diazepam, flunitrazepam, lorazepam, methadone, morphine, oxazepam and temazepam.

Police would be able to carry out up to three preliminary saliva tests and, if positive, require a blood sample to be taken.

The government is consulting on which drugs should be included and what the limits for each should be.

BBC NEWS - 2013
Andy284
 
Posts: 170
Joined: Sun Oct 21, 2012 3:52 pm

Re: One in five have "driven on drugs"

Postby Lucylou » Thu Sep 15, 2016 3:19 pm

Hi All,

New to this forum. Does anybody know the legal limit for Methodone? for the new Drug driving law, a friend of mine has been asked by the DVLA to give Permission to share his Medical records with them. He refused as he is no longer in treatment and they are not happy with this. Has anybody else experienced this or something similar with the DVLA? I am unsure of how to advise him so any help/advice would be gratefully received.
Lucylou
 
Posts: 1
Joined: Thu Sep 15, 2016 3:04 pm


Return to DRUGS ADDICTION

Who is online

Users browsing this forum: No registered users and 2 guests

cron