subject: Understanding The Effect That Prescription Medications Have On Car Accidents [print this page] If you are on any kind of prescriptions drugs and medications, you could be putting yourself and others at risk every time you get behind the wheel of a car. A great percentage of accidents on the road are due to mind altering drugs that are in people's bodies, even if they are legal.
When are minds are slower to react due to drugs in our body, we may be unable to see and react to a road sign, someone breaking quickly in front of us, or even a child running across the street. If you think about it, most traffic accidents are actually caused by people who either make poor decisions or who have terrible reaction times.
And so when some crazy driver pulls out in front of them, they don't have the quick reactions to prevent the accident and they just plow right into the other vehicle. Given some of the well-documented side effects of many prescription drugs, it is shocking that doctors aren't warning more people to avoid driving when they are on these drugs.
For example, statin drugs continue to be hyped up by drug companies as a miracle pill for high cholesterol. They are heavily promoted by drug companies who, of course, minimize the toxic side effects of these drugs and exaggerate their benefits.
One of the better-known toxic side effects of statin drugs is brain fog. It can also cause confusion, forgetfulness, and chronic muscle pain.
We've also got antidepressant drugs which we now know cause violent, aggressive behavior in people. Is it possible that antidepressants are part of the reason we see people losing their cool in traffic these days?
Perhaps a high percentage of road rage is even due to these medications causing unnatural side effects in users. When you have people out there driving around the cities of our nation and they're doped up on drugs, they are no doubt causing more automobile accidents because they have slower reaction times and impaired nervous system function due to the drugs.
In other words, they are not the healthy, alert drivers that we should have on the roads. They're out driving around with rather obvious safety impairments.
Or, in the case of antidepressants, they may be violent time bombs just ready to be ticked off by some other driver. If such research were conducted, it wouldn't be surprising to find that taking certain drugs greatly impairs a person's ability to operate a vehicle safely.
So what can we do about it? The problem is that such a large percentage of the U.S. population is doped up on these drugs that you couldn't ban them from driving because you would have tens of millions of people who would have to start using public transportation.
There would hardly be anyone left on the roads if you truly enforced that kind of law. Thus the only real practical solution is to let people continue driving on the roads even though they have impaired reaction times and suppressed alertness.
Safety studies need to be conducted. We need to find out the relationship between the intake of prescription drugs and the increased risk of automobile accidents.
If that data shows a strong correlation, medications need to carry strong, clearly visible warnings, and physicians need to start warning patients not to drive when they consume these drugs. Then again, most doctors and patients alike routinely ignore drug safety warnings.
Come to think of it, cigarette packages quite blatantly tell people that smoking causes lung cancer, and the general population hasn't figured that one out yet, either. Apparently, smoking cigarettes impairs your ability to read and understand warning labels, not to mention your driving ability (have you ever noticed that the vast majority of traffic accidents are caused by smokers?).
What it demonstrates, though, is that warning labels rarely change consumer behavior. If we want to make the roads safer for everyone, we have to focus on preventing disease and promoting brain-healthy foods like fish oils, spirulina, vegetables, fruits, nuts and of course cardiovascular exercise.
That's how you create a nation of alert drivers who can avoid harming themselves and those around them. Talk to your doctor today about the potential side effects of the medications you are taking!