Publication | Closed Access
Incidence and Toxicological Aspects of Drugs Detected in 484 Fatally Injured Drivers and Pedestrians in Ontario
104
Citations
19
References
1982
Year
Substance UseToxicological AspectsToxicological AnalysesSafety ScienceInjury PreventionInjured DriversAdverse Drug ReactionDrug TestToxicologyDrug OverdoseClinical ToxicologyDrug ToxicityHealth SciencesDrug SafetyCannabis UseDrugs DetectedPharmacologyComprehensive Drug StudyEpidemiologySubstance AbuseAddictionForensic ToxicologyPatient SafetyAnalytical ProceduresMedicineEmergency Medicine
Results are presented of a comprehensive drug study carried out on specimens from drivers and pedestrians fatally injured in Ontario. Toxicological analyses were regularly performed on blood and urine and occasionally on vitreous humor, stomach contents, and liver. The analytical procedures could detect and quantitate a wide variety of drugs including such illicit drugs as Cannabis. With respect to drivers, alcohol was found in 57% of the study sample and drugs other than alcohol, in 26%. However, in only 9.5% of the drivers were psychoactive drugs (other than alcohol) detected in the blood in concentrations that may adversely affect driving skills. Delta-9-Tetrahydrocannabinol and diazepam accounted for a majority of the findings in this category.
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