
1 minute read
Impaired Driving Is The Leading Criminal Cause Of Death In Canada—And It’s Entirely Preventable
from 983
Alberta RCMP Traffic
Submitted
Advertisement
Together, we can make our roads safer for everyone. Because one life lost is too many.
Vermilion and St. Paul, would like to remind drivers that the traffic safety focus for the month of July is Impaired Driving.
Summer has arrived and many people are making the most of the warm weather to socialize with others. However, people should also think ahead to how they will get home safely. Collisions involving impaired drivers tend to happen more often during the summer months than the rest of the year. Impaired driving is preventable when drivers plan for a safe ride home.
• In 2019, about one in eight drivers involved in a fatal collision was legally impaired at the time of the crash.
• Impaired driving collisions most commonly occur at night. Between 2015 and 2019, about half (49.8%) of impaired driving casualty collisions occurred between 7:00 pm and 3:00 am.
• On average over the last five years, over 4,500 people were convicted of impaired driving in Alberta each year.
Cannabis
• Research shows cannabis use can reduce many cognitive and motor skills required to drive safely, such as tracking, reaction time, visual function, concentration, short-term memory, and divided attention. Combining cannabis with alcohol further intensifies the effects on driving skills, even if the doses of either substance are low.
• The effects of consuming cannabis edibles take longer to kick in and last much longer than inhaling the drug. It may take up to two hours to feel effects, which can last 12 hours or longer.
• According to Health Canada’s 2021 Canadian Cannabis Survey, 21% of people who had used cannabis in the past 12 months reported they had driven within two hours of using cannabis, and 35% of those respondents did so within the past 30 days.
Alcohol
• Alcohol affects can affect your judgement, vision, tracking, reac -