For physiological, botanical, and policy reasons, there is presently no biological test that can measure how impaired from cannabis a human being is at a given time. There is no breathalyzer, and blood or hair or saliva tests can only confirm the presence of a molecule. These existing physical tests do not indicate physical coordination, reaction time, concentration
So if not a chemical-based test, can you actually tell if someone is “high”? Or if someone is “too high” to safely operate a vehicle?
Applying his Harvard Ph.D and 40 years as a Professor of Psychology, Michael Milburn, Ph.D thinks that he has that answer. His unique solution is a smartphone application called, the DRUID App.
As Professor Milburn explains during the featured interview, DRUID uses a combination of both mental and physical tasks to measure and compare a user’s results from his/her sober results and actually score your impairment (from any substance, including cannabis).
This episode is sponsored by Heady Vermont and by The Weekly Rollup, the newest weekly newsletter feature providing a snapshot of cannabis news and happenings in Vermont, the Northeast, the US, and even overseas. Contact [email protected] for information about podcast promotion.