TY - JOUR
T1 - Effects of kratom on driving
T2 - Results from a cross-sectional survey, ecological momentary assessment, and pilot simulated driving Study
AU - Zamarripa, C. Austin
AU - Spindle, Tory R.
AU - Panlilio, Leigh V.
AU - Strickland, Justin C.
AU - Feldman, Jeffrey D.
AU - Novak, Matthew D.
AU - Epstein, David H.
AU - Dunn, Kelly E.
AU - McCurdy, Christopher R.
AU - Sharma, Abhisheak
AU - Kuntz, Michelle A.
AU - Mukhopadhyay, Sushobhan
AU - Raju, Kanumuri Siva Rama
AU - Rogers, Jeffrey M.
AU - Smith, Kirsten E.
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2024 The Author(s). Published with license by Taylor & Francis Group, LLC.
PY - 2024
Y1 - 2024
N2 - Objectives: Despite widespread kratom use, there is a lack of knowledge regarding its effects on driving. We evaluated the self-reported driving behaviors of kratom consumers and assessed their simulated-driving performance after self-administering kratom products. Methods: We present results from: 1) a remote, national study of US adults who regularly use kratom, and 2) an in-person substudy from which we re-recruited participants. In the national study (N = 357), participants completed a detailed survey and a 15-day ecological momentary assessment (EMA) that monitored naturalistic kratom use. For the remote study, outcomes were self-reported general and risky driving behaviors, perceived impairment, and driving confidence following kratom administration. For the in-person substudy, 10 adults consumed their typical kratom products and their driving performance on a high-fidelity driving simulator pre- and post-kratom administration was evaluated. Results: Over 90% of participants surveyed self-reported driving under the influence of kratom. Most reported low rates of risky driving behavior and expressed high confidence in their driving ability after taking kratom. This was consistent with EMA findings: participants reported feeling confident in their driving ability and perceived little impairment within 15-180 min after using kratom. In the in-person substudy, there were no significant changes in simulated driving performance after taking kratom. Conclusions: Using kratom before driving appears routine, however, self-reported and simulated driving findings suggest kratom effects at self-selected doses among regular kratom consumers do not produce significant changes in subjective and objective measures of driving impairment. Research is needed to objectively characterize kratom’s impact on driving in regular and infrequent consumers.
AB - Objectives: Despite widespread kratom use, there is a lack of knowledge regarding its effects on driving. We evaluated the self-reported driving behaviors of kratom consumers and assessed their simulated-driving performance after self-administering kratom products. Methods: We present results from: 1) a remote, national study of US adults who regularly use kratom, and 2) an in-person substudy from which we re-recruited participants. In the national study (N = 357), participants completed a detailed survey and a 15-day ecological momentary assessment (EMA) that monitored naturalistic kratom use. For the remote study, outcomes were self-reported general and risky driving behaviors, perceived impairment, and driving confidence following kratom administration. For the in-person substudy, 10 adults consumed their typical kratom products and their driving performance on a high-fidelity driving simulator pre- and post-kratom administration was evaluated. Results: Over 90% of participants surveyed self-reported driving under the influence of kratom. Most reported low rates of risky driving behavior and expressed high confidence in their driving ability after taking kratom. This was consistent with EMA findings: participants reported feeling confident in their driving ability and perceived little impairment within 15-180 min after using kratom. In the in-person substudy, there were no significant changes in simulated driving performance after taking kratom. Conclusions: Using kratom before driving appears routine, however, self-reported and simulated driving findings suggest kratom effects at self-selected doses among regular kratom consumers do not produce significant changes in subjective and objective measures of driving impairment. Research is needed to objectively characterize kratom’s impact on driving in regular and infrequent consumers.
KW - Kratom
KW - cross-sectional survey
KW - driving simulator
KW - ecological momentary assessment
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U2 - 10.1080/15389588.2024.2327827
DO - 10.1080/15389588.2024.2327827
M3 - Article
C2 - 38497810
AN - SCOPUS:85188460998
SN - 1538-9588
VL - 25
SP - 594
EP - 603
JO - Traffic Injury Prevention
JF - Traffic Injury Prevention
IS - 4
ER -