Dr. Marilyn Huestis Part 2: State Regulations to Ensure Road Safety
What Do I Need to Know about Marijuana?
Release Date: 07/21/2019
What Do I Need to Know about Marijuana?
Key Points Strong evidence marijuana causes psychosis The more marijuana you use, the greater the incidence of psychosis This dose-response relationship suggests causality.
info_outline Dr. Marilyn Huestis: Part 25-Israel’s Experience & Advice for ResearchersWhat Do I Need to Know about Marijuana?
Key Points
info_outline Dr. Compton: Part 24: More on Executive Function - What is the ABCD Study? 1What Do I Need to Know about Marijuana?
Key Points
info_outline Dr. Huestis: Part 23:Marijuana EdiblesWhat Do I Need to Know about Marijuana?
Key Points
info_outline Dr. Vandrey: Part 22-On Marijuana Edibles, CBD & What is Synthesis?What Do I Need to Know about Marijuana?
Key Points
info_outline Dr. Marilyn Huestis: Part 21-How Marijuana Affects KidsWhat Do I Need to Know about Marijuana?
Marilyn A. Huestis, PhD, includes the following key Points:
info_outline Dr. Mahmoud ElSohly: Part 20-Is Marijuana the Same as Epidiolex?What Do I Need to Know about Marijuana?
Mahmoud A. Elsohly, PhD, directs the Marijuana Project, which grows pharmaceutical-grade marijuana for research.
info_outline Dr. Marilyn Huestis: Part 19-Marijuana ToleranceWhat Do I Need to Know about Marijuana?
Marilyn A. Huestis, PhD, recently retired as chief of chemistry and drug metabolism at the Intramural Research Program of the National Institute on Drug Abuse but remains highly active in the field.
info_outline Dr. Wilson Compton: Part 18-Predicting Future Marijuana ProblemsWhat Do I Need to Know about Marijuana?
Wilson Compton, MD, is deputy director of the National Institute on Drug Abuse, an agency of the National Institutes of Health.
info_outline Dr. Ryan Vandrey: Part 17-Can States Regulate Medical Marijuana like FDA Does?What Do I Need to Know about Marijuana?
Dr. Vandrey's key points include:
info_outlineMarilyn A. Huestis, PhD, recently retired as chief of chemistry and drug metabolism at the Intramural Research Program of the National Institute on Drug Abuse, but remains highly active in the field. She is known for her research on how marijuana use affects driving and how exposure to parents’ marijuana use affects the developing fetus, breast-feeding newborns, and young children, as well as the new psychoactive substances.
Key Points
- US is not prepared for driving with marijuana on board. Huge issue and huge problem.
- In occasional users, 74% of THC comes out of the body in 30 minutes, 90% in 1.4 hours. Average time to get drivers’ blood drawn is 1.4 to 4 hours.
- Many states have zero tolerance levels such as 1 or 2 nanograms per milliliter.
- Establish impairment first, then take the biological sample.
- A-Ride Program (NHTSA) trains every police officer to do the field sobriety test.
- Also can establish impairment via witnesses.
Next Up: Dr. Huestis on How Other Nations Ensure Road Safety