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We arrested a woman last week for driving while impaired who was high on marijuana … – Facebook

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CED Clinical Relevance
#35 Clinical Context
Background information relevant to the evolving cannabis medicine landscape.
PolicySafety
Clinical Summary

This case report describes a driver arrested for impaired driving who was actively smoking cannabis immediately before law enforcement contact and had committed multiple traffic violations. The incident highlights the clinical and public health challenge of cannabis impairment detection and enforcement, particularly as cannabis legalization increases its availability and use. While the article provides limited clinical detail, it underscores the real-world concern that cannabis intoxication impairs motor function and judgment, creating significant safety risks on roadways comparable to alcohol impairment. Clinicians should be aware that cannabis use disorder and acute cannabis intoxication are associated with increased accident risk and that patients using cannabis should be counseled against driving, particularly in the first hours after consumption when impairment is greatest. For clinical practice, this case reinforces the importance of screening patients about cannabis use and driving habits, and educating patients that cannabis impairs driving ability regardless of legalization status in their jurisdiction.

Dr. Caplan’s Take
“What this case illustrates is that we still lack reliable, roadside detection methods for cannabis impairment, which creates a real problem for public safety enforcement and leaves physicians like me without clear clinical tools to quantify impairment the way we can with alcoholโ€”this gap in our medical and legal framework is something we need to address urgently rather than pretend doesn’t exist.”
Clinical Perspective

๐Ÿ’Š Law enforcement observations of cannabis impairment in driving cases highlight the ongoing challenge of detecting and documenting cannabis-related driving impairment in clinical and roadside settings. While this case involves clear behavioral violations and active cannabis use, the relationship between observed cannabis use and actual impairment is more complex than with alcohol, given the variable pharmacokinetics, wide range of individual tolerance, and the poor correlation between THC blood levels and functional impairment. Healthcare providers should be aware that patients may underreport cannabis use when discussing driving safety or presenting after motor vehicle accidents, and that standard impairment assessment tools are less validated for cannabis than alcohol. Clinicians should consider routinely counseling patients about the risks of driving after cannabis use, particularly for those with regular use or higher potency products, while recognizing that detection and legal consequences for cannabis-impaired driving remain inconsistently applied across jurisdictions. Given these gaps, providers can play an important

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