Columbia Norml
  • Home
  • Norml News
  • Medical News
  • National News
  • User Manuals
  • Privacy Policy
45d82dd17a-826x470
February 8, 2023

Legalizing recreational marijuana could increase traffic crashes, insurance-backed group warns

admin Medical Marijuana News

45d82dd17a.jpeg

Published: Aug 3, 2017, 9:13 am • Updated: Aug 3, 2017, 10:31 am

By Fredrick Kunkle, The Washington Post

A traffic safety organization is warning that two recent studies suggest that legalizing recreational marijuana could lead to an increase in crashes, including deadly ones.

The Insurance Institute for Highway Safety (IIHS) says that studies by the Highway Loss Data Institute and researchers at the University of Texas at Austin point to an increase in crash risk in states that legalized the recreational use of pot.

Related: Studies offer conflicting conclusions on marijuana legalization’s role in car crashes, fatalities

The Highway Loss Data Institute – which, like the IIHS, is a nonprofit organization backed by insurance companies – reported in June that insurance companies received higher-than-expected collision claims in Colorado, Washington and Oregon after those states allowed people to buy marijuana for recreational purposes. The frequency of claims rose about 3 percent, compared with surrounding western states that continued to have laws on the books prohibiting recreational use of marijuana, the institute found.

Meanwhile, the University of Texas study also found an increase in fatal crashes in two states that fully legalized pot. Yet the authors of the UT study – which was published in the online edition of the American Journal of Public Health in June – also said that the increase was too small to be statistically significant.


Related stories

  • This driver had 54 times the legal limit of THC in his system, say Washington cops
  • Weed smell not sufficient reason for car search, Colorado court rules
  • Montana man challenges state standard for marijuana DUI
  • Police methods increasingly used for marijuana DUI prosecution “not an exact science”
  • Studies offer conflicting conclusions on marijuana legalization’s role in car crashes, fatalities

The IIHS, in its upcoming Status Report newsletter, takes a slightly different view of the Texas study than the Texas researchers did. The IIHS argues that the Texas study may have been structured in such a way as to have underestimated the effect of recreational marijuana use.

For example, UT researchers focused on a period that coincided with voters’ legalization of recreational marijuana in one of the targeted states – but before weed became widely available for purchase. The IIHS said it makes sense that a larger effect might have been seen when looking at crash rates after retail sales began.

The upshot, according to the IIHS, is that the early evidence suggests that making it easier for people to get high is also likely to make it easier for people to wreck their vehicles.

But the question is far from settled, and probably the aspect all the studies agree on is the need for more research. In December, for example, Columbia University researchers reported a reduction in traffic fatalities in states that enacted medical marijuana laws, possibly because fewer people were driving drunk.

The analysis of the two studies is included in the IIHS Status Report due for release Thursday.

Topics: car crash, driving high, DUI, insurance, research, traffic fatalities

While hearing case, Supreme Court Justice Elena Kagan waxes nostalgic about weed at parties Marijuana odor could be “public nuisance” under proposed Vermont bill

Related Posts

efc7f2ab2f-826x470

Medical Marijuana News

Washington State Health Department misfires on anti-pot message targeting Latinos

4c38a4e7af-826x470

Medical Marijuana News

More prime shopping time: Colorado Springs dispensaries may get extended hours

826b25dbe5-826x470

Medical Marijuana News

CBD blending in at juice and smoothie bars

Recent Posts

  • be-careful-shipping-drugs-through-the-mail-this-holiday-season_1Be Careful Shipping Drugs Through the Mail This Holiday Season
  • ‘Pharma Bro’ Martin Shkreli Found Guilty on 3 Fraud Charges
  • efc7f2ab2f-826x470Washington State Health Department misfires on anti-pot message targeting Latinos
  • What To Do With Seized Marijuana Grow Equipment?
  • Radical Rant: UK Cannabis Social Clubs Are Leading the Charge for Legalization
  • 4c38a4e7af-826x470More prime shopping time: Colorado Springs dispensaries may get extended hours
  • 2017-high-times-cannabis-cup-canada-day-1-recap_12017 HIGH TIMES Cannabis Cup Canada: Day 1 Recap
  • 826b25dbe5-826x470CBD blending in at juice and smoothie bars
  • Cannabis-Loving Catholics Plan to Defy Church, Burn Marijuana Oil Inside DC Basilica
  • Stoner Sex: Porn, Choking, Painful Intercourse & Weed Whores

Categories

  • Medical Marijuana News
  • National Marijuana News
  • NORML News
Columbia Norml