Now they tell us.

Research by Dayton’s Wright State University on drivers who died in car crashes in Montgomery County over six years from 2019 to 2024, shows 41.9 percent were significantly impaired by THC, the ingredient in marijuana that produces the high.

Perhaps if preliminary results of the study released at the American College of Surgeons Clinical Congress 2025, held last week in Chicago, had been known to Ohioans the 2023 vote to legalize recreational marijuana would have been defeated.

Blood samples from autopsies show the drivers in THC-connected fatal car crashes averaged six times the level considered to cause impairment. Slow reaction, poor coordination, bad judgment, limited attention span, and false perceptions are the driving issues connected to THC ingestion.

It’s aga

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