Increase in Drug Use Noted Among Drivers Killed in Car Wrecks

More drivers who perish in auto wrecks are dying with drugs in their system.

A new report by the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration reveals that in 2009, 18 percent of the 21,798 drivers killed in car crashes tested positive for some sort of drug. The number has been rising steadily for the past five years, with 13 percent of drivers testing positive in 2005.

In fact, the actual percentage of victims who died with drugs in their bloodstream is likely to be far higher, because the NHTSA tested only 63 percent of all victims in 2009. Of those tested, 33 percent came back positive for drugs, a figure that has also been rising steadily since 2005.

The tests counted both illicit drugs like heroin and marijuana, and legally prescribed drugs and over-the-counter medications. In releasing the report, NHTSA officials stressed that a positive drug finding does not indicate impairment, but merely that drugs remained in the driver’s system at the time of death.

“Every driver on the road has a personal responsibility to operate his or her vehicle with full and uncompromised attention on the driving task,” said NHTSA Administrator David Strickland. “Today’s report provides a warning signal that too many Americans are driving after having taken drugs, not realizing the potential for putting themselves and others on the highway at risk.”

There was wide variation among the different states, with Montana (77 percent), Connecticut (57 percent), and Vermont (39 percent) registering the highest proportion of positive tests.

Related Post:
Trend of Declining Traffic Deaths Continues in First Half of 2010

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