Pubdate: Fri, 30 Jun 2000 Source: Australian Financial Review (Australia) Copyright: 2000 Australian Financial Review Contact: GPO Box 506, Sydney 2001 Fax: (61 2) 9282 3137 Website: http://www.afr.com.au/ Author: Campbell Aitken DRUG-ACCIDENT LINK IS FAR FROM PROVED In her article of June 23, Jan Wade quoted some of the Macfarlane Burnet Centre's research on illicit drug use and driving to support her argument that tougher law enforcement is needed to combat drug problems. It is true that many of the heroin users we interviewed drove to buy their drugs, and some routinely consumed heroin before driving away. Unfortunately, Mrs Wade ignored our less convenient findings, including (from a review of the scientitic literature) that the links between illicit drug use and increased road accident risk are far from clear-cut. Some of the best local research has been conducted by Professor Olaf Drummer (Victorian Insitute of Forensic Medicine), who found that opiate users were not significantly more likely to be culpable in fatal accidents than non-users (unless they had also recently consumed alcohol). For cannabis users the likelihood of culpability was actually slightly lower than for drug-free drivers, but not significantly so. Mrs Wade also neglected our finding that the reason many heroin users consume drugs before driving rather afterwards is because they perceive the risk of being apprehended in possession of drugs to outweigh risks associated with drug use, and that drug-driving is of little concern to most users because they are already acting outside the law by using prohibited drugs. This is another example of drug prohibition policies having an unintended adverse effect. Mrs Wade's call for increased law enfocement flies in the face of evidence from the home of drug prohibition and "the war against drugs" - the United States - where HIV is rampant among drug injectors, where the prison population is huge and increasing rapidly, where seizure and forfeiture laws have generated massive corruption and eroded civil liberties, and where drug problems are worse on almost every criterion than in Australia. Dr Campbell Aitken, Macfarlane Burnet Centre for Medical Research, Fairfield, Vic - --- MAP posted-by: Jo-D