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News (Media Awareness Project) - CN ON: New Campaign Targets Drugged Driving
Title:CN ON: New Campaign Targets Drugged Driving
Published On:2005-12-09
Source:Centretown News (CN ON)
Fetched On:2008-01-14 21:18:12
NEW CAMPAIGN TARGETS DRUGGED DRIVING

The city's health agency will soon be telling teens not to "drug and
drive" through a $346,000 citywide marketing blitz. City officials say
Ottawa is the first city in Canada to craft a youth-based social
marketing message on the issue of smoking marijuana and driving, and
that lessons learned in Ottawa could be a model for the rest of Canada.

The campaign, called "Drugged Driving Kills," will be launched in
April.

Ottawa Public Health, with Carlington Community and Health Services,
is developing a grassroots message where youth will design posters,
bus ads and radio spots in five languages--English, French, Somali,
Chinese and Arabic. Tom Scholberg, the health promoter for youth at
Carlington, says the advertisements are likely to take on a style
similar to Ottawa's "expose" anti-smoking ads on the OC Transpo
system. The expose campaign is a youth-led tobacco awareness program.
Current posters use the theme "Unmask the Tobacco Industry," where a
face is pulled away to reveal a yellow-toothed, money-grabbing tobacco
executive.

The Canadian Public Health Association has already started a campaign
against drugged driving.

Scholberg says this program is important because pot use and driving
is still socially acceptable amongst teens. He says that teens believe
pot is not as dangerous as alcohol.

"I hear that you still have your senses and are aware of what's going
around you," says 14-year-old Lisgar Collegiate student, Molly
Teitelbaum,who says she has never smoked pot, but thinks driving while
high is not as dangerous as drinking and driving.

The Centre for Addiction and Mental Health's 2005 survey on student
drug use in Ontario shows that the percentage of teens driving and
using pot is higher than those who drink and drive. Approximately 20
per cent of student drivers surveyed said that they had driven within
an hour of using marijuana. A recent World Health Organization study
identified Canadians aged 14-25 as the heaviest pot users in the world.

Ottawa Police say that, anecdotally, their officers say there has been
an increase in the number of teens they pull over that have been high
while driving. Sgt. Darren Vinet, from the Alcohol and Counter
Measures section, says teens are not well informed about the dangers.
He says using pot and driving affects drivers' attention spans,
reaction time and ability to stay in lanes.

"Once you explain, they realize that maybe it is as dangerous as
drinking and driving," says Vinet.

"They need to have the information to make the informed choice and
make the right choice," says Terry-Lynne Marko, a public health nurse
from Ottawa Public Health, who helped spearhead the campaign.

A bill before Parliament would have made it mandatory to test those
suspected of using drugs and driving. Right now, testing is only
voluntary. With the dissolution of Parliament, this bill is now off
the books. Though Parliament was considering the decriminalization of
marijuana, this campaign is only targeting only smoking pot and
driving--not whether using pot is morally acceptable.

The MADD Ottawa chapter is one of the approximately 20 partners in the
program. Spokeswoman Tina Nagratha says they feel the campaign is
important because she agrees that smoking pot and driving is as bad as
drinking and driving.

While this campaign is operating locally, there are also national
efforts by the Canadian Public Health Association.

"The issue crept up on us," says Sylvia Fanjoy, director of national
programs at the association.

The national program will distribute 90,000 posters featuring two
pilots getting high before take-off. The message is that if pilots
shouldn't do it, neither should teens.

Both at the local and national level, staff members say it is
necessary to frame pot and driving as a personal choice and that
"scare tactics" telling teens it is morally wrong to use pot and drive
would be unsuccessful.

Still, some teens say they weren't sure how effective the campaign
would be without television ads. "Kids are just going to walk by a
poster, but they're always watching TV," said Zach Henry, 15, from
Lisgar Collegiate. Television ads are too expensive, says Fanjoy.

While all involved say it will probably take 20-25 years to change
attitudes about pot and driving -- similar to changing attitudes about
drinking and driving -- the city's funding for the program is
guaranteed for a year and a half.

"It's something that isn't going to go away in a year and a half,"
says Scholberg. Still, he says the issue has to be taken step-by-step.
A year and a half will allow for evaluation of the social marketing
campaign, he says, and then those in the campaign can decide what
needs to be changed in the future.
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