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News (Media Awareness Project) - Australia: Motorists May Face Dope Tests
Title:Australia: Motorists May Face Dope Tests
Published On:1998-05-13
Source:The Australian
Fetched On:2008-09-07 10:23:40
MOTORISTS MAY FACE DOPE TESTS

AUSTRALIA'S cannabis smoking motorists could soon face the same sort of
random breath testing as drinking drivers.

Further down the track, users of amphetamines - and even heroin and crack -
could be caught in the same roadside police net.

A breath test unit to screen drivers for cannabis has been developed to
prototype stage by doctors Ron Parsons and Zenon Mejglo, research chemists
at the University of Tasmania in Hobart.

Dr Parsons has been working on the project for about 20 years and was
joined by Dr Mejglo in 1992.

"I think we have proved that we can now detect cannabis in the breath," Dr
Parsons said.

"At present the police only have one instrument, the breathalyser for
alcohol. People smoke cannabis and blow nothing on the breathalyser. The
police know their driving ability is impaired, but they can't do anything
about it.

"If the police had this, another breath analysis instrument, to say drivers
had been smoking cannabis, then that's a different kettle of fish. They've
got them then and they have to have a blood test because breath analysis is
only a screening test."

Dr Parsons said police in Tasmania could already order an immediate blood
test if they suspected a driver was under the influence of drugs. Blood
tests must be performed within two hours after smoking cannabis to be
effective.

Dr Parsons said he was concerned about moves in Tasmania to "go soft" on
cannabis. "If you go soft on cannabis the police have no check on people
driving under its influence. And they will do it - they're doing it now."

Dr Parsons said he could see breath analysis for cannabis becoming part of
standard random breath testing.

The heart of the cannabis breath test device is a sensor disc, the exact
chemical composition of which is a secret shared only by Drs Parsons and
Mejglo. When an affected driver blows into a mouthpiece chemicals detecting
cannabis turn the sensor disc red.

Light hits the disc, is reflected and measured by a photo diode. With any
colour in it, the disc will show proportionately less light and provide a
reading.

Dr Parsons said the device now represented a prototype, which a
manufacturing company could look at and turn into a workable unit.

He said progress had been hampered by lack of research funds, particularly
in view of cutbacks in Federal Government research funding.

"If we had received funding we would have had the device out on the streets
by now."

He said he believed it should now be possible to take a saliva swab from
drivers who had breath tested positive to cannabis to test for other drugs,
including amphetamines, heroin, or ecstasy.

However, this research was also being inhibited by lack of research funding
and the high cost of antibodies used in saliva tests.

Checked-by: jwjohnson@netmagic.net (Joel W. Johnson)
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