DRUID
PROJECT
From the University of Groningen, Eurodurg received a
request to participate on in a European Project, aiming to collect data
on utilisation of medication that could influence driving ability.
Summary of the project
Over 40,000 people were killed
on the roads in the year 2000 in the EU. The EU has fixed the target
date of 2010 to reduce the number of road-injury fatalities by 50%
(White Paper). As the number of accidents that can be attributed to
psychoactive substances (alcohol, drugs and certain medicines) is constantly
at a high level with drugs and medicine proportionally increasing over
the years, special efforts have to be directed upon gaining better knowledge of the various aspects of
this explicit problem and developing appropriate solutions. DRUID aims
to combat the scourge of drink-driving and find answers to the question
of the use of drugs or medicines that affect people’s ability to
drive safely.
The objective of DRUID is to give scientific support to the EU transport
policy to reach the 2010th road safety target by establishing guidelines
and measures to combat impaired driving.
DRUID will
- conduct reference studies
of the impact on fitness to drive for alcohol, illicit drugs and
medicines and give new insights to the real degree of impairment
caused by psychoactive substances and their actual impact on road
safety
- generate recommendations
for the definition of analytical and risk thresholds
- analyse the
prevalence of alcohol and other psychoactive substances in accidents
and in general driving, set up a comprehensive and efficient epidemiological
database
- evaluate “good practice” for
detection and training measures for road traffic police allowing
a legal monitoring of drivers
- establish an appropriate
classification system of medicines affecting driving ability, give
recommendations for its implementation and create a framework to
position medicines according to a labelling system
- evaluate the efficiency
of strategies of prevention, penalisation and rehabilitation, considering
the difficulties of appropriate evaluation strategies for combined
substance use and recommend “good practice”
- define strategies
of driving bans, combining the road safety objectives with the individual´s
need for mobility
- define the responsibility
of health care professionals for patients consuming psychoactive
substances and their impact on road safety, elaborate guidelines
and make information available and applicable for all European countries.
Part of the project is to gather information about the consumption of
drugs with central nervous system (side)-effect in the general (non-hospitalised)
population in various EU member states.
Eurodurg should help to look for dataproviders in those countries
where the data are not easily available.
For more information see:
Interested researchers or dataproviders can contact Sylvia Hummel (email adress: s.a.hummel@rug.nl) designated by EURODURG Executive Committee to follow up this project.
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