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PRESS RELEASE - 23rd FEBRUARY, 2004
Edition
40.
Cannabis News Items From Around the World
Teething troubles cloud roadside drugs tests
Sydney Morning Herald, December 16, 2004
Teething troubles cloud roadside drugs tests
By Ruth Pollard, Health Reporter
Just days into Australia's first trial of roadside drug-testing
in Victoria, experts are calling on other states to put the brakes
on similar studies because of concerns over the test's accuracy
and the time it takes to screen motorists.
Under the Victorian system, if a motorist tests positive to drugs,
he or she will be required to undergo a second test, which could
take between five and 10 minutes to process, leading to warnings
of extended traffic delays.
A senior research fellow from the University of Western Australia's
school of medicine and pharmacology, Kyle Dyer, said that along
with the potential logistical problems, the technology was undergoing
constant change.
"Saliva testing is a rapidly developing area, with new companies
emerging and new products coming on the market regularly,"
Dr Dyer said.
The Victorian test - which screens a motorist's saliva for the
presence of cannabis and methamphetamines - is already able to
be updated because of advances in the technology.
"I would be wanting to wait until the Victorian trial is
over before it is extended anywhere - why not wait until those
results are out before we jump in?" Dr Dyer said.
Meanwhile the president of the NSW Council for Civil Liberties,
Cameron Murphy, expressed concerns about the accuracy of the tests,
and urged the Carr Government to delay the trial it plans to start
next year until the technology was of a standard equivalent to
the breath-analysis test used to detect alcohol.
"It will catch people who have not broken the law and it
will cost them a lot of money to set it right in the courts,"
Mr Murphy said, warning that the Civil Liberties Union in Southern
California had highlighted a number of problems with the roadside
tests.
Under the Victorian trial, motorists pulled over for a drug test
are required to place a small absorbent pad on their tongues for
a few seconds, and wait five minutes for the result.
Police reported that a motorist returned a positive test on Monday,
in the first hours of the operation.
Once a motorist has tested positive for drugs, he or she will
be asked to move to a police bus and provide two more saliva samples.
If a second positive test is returned, it is sent to a labora-tory
for confirmation.
Penalties include a $307 fine and the loss of three licence points.
The test, which Dr Dyer said had a good accuracy record, does
not detect the presence of prescription drugs or medications and
will not pick up if a person is a regular drug user, but has not
used drugs that day.
"Saliva gives you a very short window of detection,"
Dr Dyer said. "If you are a regular cannabis smoker your
urine can be positive for a month or longer. With saliva, it will
only pick up the parent drug itself, which has a two-to-four hour
window period after use.
"A positive [saliva test] means you are under the influence
of this drug; a urine test says you have used the drug."
Meth- amphetamine can be detected in a saliva test up to 24 hours
after ingestion, Dr Dyer said. However, heavy users may still
have traces in their saliva up to 48 hours later.
NSW is planning a 12-month trial of roadside random drug-testing,
and compulsory blood- testing of all drivers involved in fatal
accidents starting late next year, a spokesman for the Roads Minister,
Carl Scully, said yesterday. The test will check for methamphetamines,
ecstasy and cannabis.
Call to get drug drivers off road
Herald Sun, January 31st, 2005
Call to get drug drivers off road
Peter Mickelburough and Paul Anderson
DRUGGED drivers should be taken off the road and not just fined,
the State Opposition said yesterday.
The get-tough call came as police released figures showing 18
of 1855 drivers given roadside saliva tests had taken drugs.
Senior police said a disturbing number had high levels of methamphetamines
in their system.
Police Minister Tim Holding said the results showed the much-maligned
system, which was still on trial, was working.
"The Government was right to be concerned about drug-driving
on our roads, with something like one in 103 positive tests, which
compares to a one in 250 positive rate for drink-driving on our
roads," he said.
Mr Holding said he was concerned, and a little surprised, by
the high levels of methamphetamines detected, but believed the
balance of penalties was correct.
The world-first saliva testing regime had a rocky start in December,
when the first positive test proved negative in the laboratory
after the driver had been paraded before the media.
Police said there had been no false positives since the first
two days of testing, when three positive roadside saliva tests
proved negative in the lab.
Assistant Commissioner Bob Hastings said changes to the method
of saliva testing had seen all subsequent positives backed by
laboratory tests.
"People have been properly tested and the results have been
properly analysed," he said.
"No one's prosecuted . . . no one's charged until we get
the lab result."
Mr Hastings said he was disturbed by the levels of methamphetamine
in those tested.
"All of us use the roads, and if people are out there loaded
up on this sort of stuff then potentially it's a disaster,"
he said.
Opposition police spokesman Kim Wells said he strongly supported
drug-drive tests but wanted an urgent briefing from Mr Holding
to address continuing concerns.
"We are still not confident the method for testing drivers
for drugs is accurate," Mr Wells said.
"The Government told us that the (faulty) speed cameras
on the Western Ring Rd were 100 per cent accurate, so we have
a great deal of scepticism about the accuracy of drug testing."
As a third of drivers killed on Victorian roads were found with
drugs other than alcohol in their blood, Mr Wells said the existing
penalties appeared inadequate.
A first offence incurs a $307 fine and the loss of three demerit
points; subsequent offences a $1227 fine and up to a six-month
loss of licence.
"It would make more sense to me that if you tested positive
under the influence of drugs, that you would lose your licence,"
Mr Wells said.
"The issue of demerit points and a fine simply doesn't stack
up when you compare it to the penalties we hand out for alcohol.
If you are pilled up to your eyeballs, of course people like that
we want off the roads."
Between December 13 last year and January 27 this year, 1518
car drivers and 337 truck drivers were randomly drug tested.
Eleven tested positive to methamphetamine, two tested positive
to THC (the active component of cannabis), and five tested positive
to both drugs.
ABC's "Catalyst" on Random Drug Tests
Catalyst, ABC, Thursdays 8:00pm
Random Drug Tests
Thursday, 24 April 2003
Will drug tests soon be standard?
Drugs are now responsible for more deaths on the road than alcohol,
and the most common is marijuana. So the government in Victoria
has pledged to introduce the equivalent of the alcohol breath
test. Catalyst’s Graham Phillips investigates Australia’s
first random roadside drug test.
Philip Swan is searching for the equivalent of the random breath
test. For drugs this is a saliva test, where a driver has a swab
put under their tongue. But that’s where the random drug-test
dream gets problematic. Swan is currently evaluating the wares
of a number of instrument companies from around the world to see
if there is any product up to the task.
The other question hanging over random drug testing is: what
is the equivalent of .05 for substances like marijuana? How many
joints could a person smoke and still be capable in the drivers’
seat?
Researchers at Swinburn University are trying to evaluate this.
They get volunteers to smoke joints and drink alcohol and then
jump behind the wheel of a driving simulator. The scientists then
monitor their vital statistics, like how fast they drive, whether
they drift out of the lane and how well they respond to sudden
surprises on the road.
So far they have managed to dispel one of the great myths about
marijuana. While it is true that marijuana drivers tend to drive
more slowly, they are not safer. Their weakness is an inability
to make quick decisions when something unusual happens on the
road. Work is still in progress to see what the equivalent of
.05 would be. (full transcript...)
Reporter/Producer: Graham Phillips
Researcher: Graham Phillips
Story Contacts:
Professor Olaf Drummer
Victorian Institute of Forensic Medicine
57 Kavanagh St
South Bank VIC Australia
Tel: +61 2 9684 4444
Dr Philip Swann
Manager Drugs, Alcohol and Fatigue
VicRoads
MELBOURNE AUSTRALIA
Ph: +61 3 9854 2708
Dr Katherine Tzambazis
Drugs and Driving Research Unit
Centre for Neuropsychology
BSEE Swinburne Univeristy of Technology
Po Box 218
Hawthorn Victoria 3122
Australia
Ph: +61 3 9214 5757
Kevin Walsh
Biomediq
1 Williams Road
Doncaster
Melbourne Vic Australia
Ph: +61 2 9840 1800
Full Program Transcript:
Narration: The ads have been telling us how dangerous
drink-driving is for years. But how dangerous is smoking marijuana
and driving?
Male:“I think that made me so paranoid I was driving
really slow and more carefully. Then again I did imagine things
on the side of the road.”
Graham: Do you reckon it’s a problem on the road?
Male: No,no, drinking is but not pot.
Female: “I’d have to say it’s dangerous
because you’re not in full control of your mind.”
Narration: The debate’s being going on for years,
but at last we have a definitive answer. For more than a decade,
everyone who’s ended up in this Melbourne morgue from a
car accident has had their blood analysed…to see if the
crash was caused by alcohol, marijuana, amphetamines or other
drugs. And Olaf Drummer’s results were staggering.
Professor Olaf Drummer: Drivers who use cannabis and
are driving shortly after are almost seven times higher risk of
being involved in a fatal crash than a drug free driver.
Narration: In fact, drugs combined kill more people
on the roads now than alcohol, and the leading killer drug is
marijuana. This result was a genuine surprise, because some studies
had shown marijuana was not that dangerous… because it makes
you a more cautious driver.
Dr Katherine Tzambazis: Yes, there were some reports
suggesting that those who consumed cannabis actually overestimate
the effects of the drugs and therefore compensate for those impairing
effects.
Narration: But the manager of drugs alcohol and fatigue
for Vic Roads, Philip Swann, says many of the academic studies
were fundamentally flawed.
Dr Philip Swann: One of the problems we’ve found
is that academics are limited by ethics committees to study very
low doses and that bears no resemblance to what happens on the
road. The sorts of levels that are found in the morgue are much
higher.
Narration: With the morgue results leaving little room
for argument, Katherine Tzambasis and her team at Melbourne’s
Swinburne University are now trying to find out the specific effects
on driving, of marijuana’s active ingredient – THC.
This is no ordinary joint. It’s been imported from the National
Institute on Drug Abuse in America…the only lab in the world
that rolls cannabis cigarettes to scientific standards.
Swinburne University: They control how much THC goes
into them so we can have the same amount all the time because
street marijuana varies.
Narration: This is smoking cannabis scientific style,
to make sure a precise dose is received.
Swinburne University: So inhale for two seconds. Hold
for 10 seconds. Then exhale. Then wait 60 seconds and do it again.”
Narration: After six regimented puffs, the volunteer’s
driving skills are put to the test.
Swinburne University: So we’ll do the driving
simulator task now. There are four tasks: two freeway tasks, two
city driving tasks.
Narration: The studies have found that the effects of
marijuana on driving are quite different to alcohol. Booze makes
a driver more likely to speed and to take risks. And marijuana
doesn’t do this, but it does make drivers more likely to
drift across the road.
Dr Katherine Tzambazis: Specifically your ability
to maintain a specific position within a lane, so you tend to
have two or more wheels of the vehicle crossing over lanes marked
out for traffic coming in the opposite direction or in the same
direction. So the impairment that you observe can be quite dangerous
in real life driving.
Narration: And when something unexpected happens
a cannabis driver is much slower to react.
Dr Philip Swann: Where marijuana THC is so dangerous
is that although people tend to slow down, they are really at
risk in complex decision making. So if you are driving on a lonely
road by yourself in full daylight with no other cars it’s
one situation, but if you’re driving in an urban environment
with complex intersections, that’s when cannabis really
shows up.”
Narration: And cannabis gets into the blood
much faster than alcohol. You are as impaired as someone with
an alcohol reading of .15 when your cannabis reading is five nanograms
per mil.
Dr Philip Swann: When you first smoke the joint, your
concentration goes up well over 70 nanograms, sometimes as much
as a 100 nanograms, then it quickly drops down to about 20 nanograms
and then drops reasonably consistently with time.
Narration: But what many people do is not just smoke
and drive, but smoke and drink and drive. To test the effect of
that, volunteers consume a few vodkas and orange with their cannabis.
And the results were shocking.
Dr Katherine Tzambazis: If you smoked a cannabis cigarette
and you had a blood alcohol concentration of .04, which is under
the legal limit, that’s actually equivalent to be being
a .14 blood alcohol concentration and in those cases reports show
that you’re risk of having an accident is increased by 48.
Narration: Not 48 percent; 48 times higher. Philip Swan
believes it’s high time we had roadside tests, and he’s
currently interviewing companies that say they have the technology
to do it. The first question is, what do you test?
Professor Olaf Drummer: Urine is awkward in a roadside
setting and it doesn’t give us any indication of recent
use. It’s not relevant whether a person used a drug in the
past, just so long as they’re not impaired.
Narration: The only body fluid that makes sense for
a roadside test is saliva. A sample could be taken at the same
time a random breath test is done… to see if the driver
was too stoned to drive.
Dr Philip Swann: The recommendations from the experts
is that you should allow 4 hours after one joint.
Narration: In Victoria, the government has said they’ll
crack down on smoking and driving, by introducing driver drugs
tests. But at this stage none of the other state governments are
promising it.
A Govt sponsored article on Drug Driving
December, 2004 http://www.science.org.au/nova/085/085key.htm
The Victorian Parliament recently gave motorists something to
chew on. In December 2003 it passed legislation empowering police
to randomly test drivers for the presence of the active component
of cannabis (tetrahydrocannabinol or THC) and methamphetamines
(also known as speed, ice and crystal meth). Drivers’ saliva
will be tested using an absorbent collector. To collect saliva
drivers will be asked to touch their tongues to the collector,
place it in their mouths or chew on it. Anyone found guilty of
driving with these illicit drugs in their bodies faces fines of
up to $1200 and a possible cancellation of their driver’s
licence.
Victoria started testing drivers in December 2004, and other
Australian states are contemplating similar measures in their
efforts to reduce the problem of drug-impaired driving (drug-driving)
because it is fast becoming a major road-safety problem.
What is drug-driving?
One way of defining drug-driving is the driving of a motor vehicle
while under the influence of drugs other than alcohol (while alcohol
is technically a drug, drink-driving is usually treated as a separate
issue). Another is the driving of a motor vehicle with the presence
of drugs other than alcohol in the system. These two definitions
might look pretty much the same but, as we will see, the difference
between them is important when it comes to designing legislation.
Drugs of particular concern to road-safety authorities are those
that could impact driver performance. They include depressants
such as cannabis, methadone and heroin, stimulants such as speed,
cocaine and ecstasy, and hallucinogens such as LSD.
Some prescription drugs can also affect driving; tranquillising
drugs such as rohypnol and oxazepam, for example, can make users
drowsy and almost certainly more liable to err while driving.
However, the Victorian drug-driving legislation does not make
it an offence to drive while using such drugs.
The increasing threat of drug-driving
Drug-driving appears to be quite prevalent in Australia. A 2003
survey of 19–23-year-olds in Victoria found that more than
half had used such drugs in their lifetime, while 28 per cent
of surveyed males and 17 per cent of females admitted to driving
a motor vehicle while under the influence of an illicit drug.
Another survey in Western Australia in 2001 estimated that 17
per cent of drivers aged 20–29 years had driven a vehicle
while under the influence of drugs. A third survey, this time
of injecting drug-users in Sydney, revealed that 88 per cent of
those users who had driven a vehicle in the previous 12 months
had drug-driven in that period. About 4 per cent of respondents
(6 per cent of men and 2 per cent of women) to the 2001 National
Drug Strategy Household Survey admitted that they had driven while
under the influence of drugs in the previous 12 months.
Perhaps the most worrying study of all was carried out by researchers
at the Department of Forensic Medicine at Monash University. The
study looked for the presence of drugs in 3398 drivers who died
in crashes in New South Wales, Victoria and Western Australia
in the period 1990-1999. It found that drugs (other than alcohol)
were present in 26.7 per cent of all dead drivers. The study also
found that the prevalence of drugs increased over the decade.
How drugs can affect driving
While such a finding doesn’t prove a direct relationship
between drug use and road deaths, it serves to alert legislators
to the problem. But they faced some significant practical problems
in designing laws to limit drug-driving. The intensity and nature
of a person’s reaction to a drug depends on several factors,
and therefore deciding on a threshold amount – over which
driving might be considered to be impaired – is very difficult.
A person’s reaction to drugs is influenced, for instance,
by past exposure to the drug and by genetic differences, as well
as by the ‘quality’ of the drug, which for illicit
drugs is highly variable. Further complicating things is the common
practice of using more than one drug (including alcohol) simultaneously.
These factors and others make predicting the effects of drugs
on driving an inexact science.
Nevertheless, some general observations can be made. Depressant
drugs tend to slow reactions and reduce concentration. Experiments
have shown that users of cannabis find it difficult to stay in
one lane on the road and may be unaware that they are drifting
into the path of oncoming traffic. Drivers under the influence
of cannabis may also find complex driving situations, such as
busy roads or uncontrolled intersections, more difficult to negotiate
than they would when driving drug-free. Stimulants like speed
might make drivers over-confident and aggressive, while those
under the influence of hallucinogens like LSD might react erratically
to imaginary obstacles or sounds.
Testing for impairment
Two basic approaches can be taken to detect drug-drivers: testing
for the impairment of driving performance; and testing for the
presence of drugs.
The impairment approach, which takes as a starting point our
first definition of drug-driving, involves the use of tests like
the Standardised Field Sobriety Test (Box 1, Standardised Field
Sobriety Test), in which drivers are required to perform tasks
designed to test the extent to which they are intoxicated by alcohol.
This test has been adapted to measure the extent to which a driver’s
use of drugs might hinder performance equivalent to certain levels
of blood alcohol content (BAC). The Standardised Field Sobriety
Test and other similar impairment tests, including the more refined
‘drug evaluation and classification’ program, have
been shown to measure the degree of drug-induced impairment at
quite a high level of reliability, although they are far from
foolproof.
In most Australian states, police use what might be termed a
‘driving under the influence’ approach, in which they
are able to arrest a driver they suspect of driving under the
influence of a drug to the extent that driving performance is
impaired. The suspect may be required first to take an impairment
test and then to provide a blood or urine sample, which is tested
for the presence of various drugs.
Presence of drugs
The limitation of the driving-under-the-influence approach is
that it is only implemented when police have cause to suspect
a driver and doesn’t act as a strong deterrent to drug-driving.
An option for overcoming this is random testing, in which drivers
are pulled over arbitrarily for drug-testing, just as is done
for alcohol.
Testing for drugs at the roadside, however, is not as simple
as it is for alcohol. For a start, the range of drugs that could
impair driving is wide, although their actual impacts on safety
are often not well known. Moreover, few drugs are detectable in
the breath like alcohol. A sample of bodily fluid may therefore
be needed, but collecting such fluid – particularly blood
and urine – can be a messy and invasive process. For this
reason, biochemists have spent a great deal of time and energy
on developing tests using bodily fluids that are more easily collected,
such as saliva or sweat.
There’s another difference between random drug-testing
and random alcohol testing. The relationship between BAC and the
risk of crashing is well known; the BAC threshold, which is set
at 0.05 per cent in Australia, is a well-accepted standard. Setting
thresholds for other drugs is more difficult: the study of the
relationship between most drugs and driving is still relatively
new and little is known about the relationship between drug use
and crash risk.
In Victoria’s planned introduction of random drug-testing,
drivers will be stopped at random and asked to submit a saliva
sample. This will be placed in a device that uses a process known
as immunoassay to test for the presence of specific drugs.
Drivers who return a positive result from the first saliva test
will be required to provide a second sample; if that is also positive
they will be interviewed by police and allowed to leave (but not
to drive). The saliva sample will be sent to a laboratory for
more accurate testing, which may take some days; if this confirms
the presence of an illicit drug, the driver may be prosecuted.
Impairment or presence?
Critics argue that the link between the ‘presence’
approach and road safety is tenuous, since the detection of an
illicit drug in a person’s saliva does not indicate whether
that person is fit to drive or not. Civil libertarians suggest
that the approach constitutes a significant breach of privacy
for what may be a negligible effect on road safety. But advocates
say that the real power of random testing is in the message it
sends: drug-driving is dangerous, and it’s about time drivers
were up to speed with that.
Mining Industry take on Saliva Testing
Excerpt from: "Drug and alcohol surveillance: how do
you know it is working?"
http://www.miningaustralia.com.au/articles/18/0c010b18.asp
Saliva is an alternative test medium to urine. Although the concept
is old, commercial saliva testing kits have only recently been
marketed. They use test-strip methodology similar to urine test
strips.
Saliva has two potential advantages. First, saliva can be collected
without a need for privacy, which limits opportunities for tampering
and adulteration. Second, saliva tests generally become negative
earlier after drug use so, theoretically, a negative saliva test
might mean that a drug user is no longer impaired.
For most drugs, this is a rather unsafe approach because we do
not know the true duration of impairment after use. In the case
of occasional use of cannabis, we do know that impairment passes
before the urine becomes negative. However, cannabis products
partition poorly into saliva, so the role of saliva in cannabis
testing has yet to be validated.
There is little published information on the performance of saliva
testing in the workplace, so we cannot make generalisations about
the all-important rates of false positives and negatives, compared
with rates for urine test strips and laboratory screening.
There are no national or international standards that equate
to the AS4308 standards for urine testing, so evidential value
of an initial positive or negative saliva result has yet to be
tested.
While some of the collected saliva sample can be subjected to
a confirmatory test at an accredited laboratory, there is presently
little experience in interpreting the test results and no standards
to define the relevance of any measured level.
Without such standards, it may be very difficult to find legal
validation for any action taken against a worker who returns positive
results.
In short, it is too early to judge the future role of saliva
testing in an overall drug and alcohol safety policy. It may prove
useful for distinguishing intoxicated drug users from those who
are simply still excreting drugs in urine. National standards,
suitable confirmatory methods and workplace validation are awaited.
Drugs and alcohol: testing issues
Human Resources Magazine February 23, 2005
http://www.humanresourcesmagazine.com.au/articles/69/0C01F369.asp?Type=60&Category=876
CBH Resources took over the Pasminco-Elura Mine and renamed it
Endeavor Mine in September 2003. The mine’s drug and alcohol
policy was drafted around three years ago with workforce, management
and medical input. Karen Prior, Endeavor’s occupational
health, safety and environment superintendent says there are no
issues within the 250-strong workforce, because drug and alcohol
testing in mining is standard and the policy has been in place
for years.
“In fact, our people think we are a bit softer on them,
because we do saliva testing for drugs, rather than urine testing,”
she says. Saliva testing only shows up marijuana usage in the
last four to five hours, but 24 hours for all the other drugs,
including amphetamines (speed), opiates (heroin, morphine, codeine),
cocaine, benzodiazepine (valium and so on) and THC (cannabis).
The advantages of saliva over urine testing are the speed of obtaining
results (10 minutes versus several days) and it is less invasive.
“You have a right to be who you want to be on your days
off, but you also have a responsibility to yourself and those
you work with, not to be impaired when you go to work,”
says Prior.
The Securetec Drugwipe II Twin
Victorian Law specifying the saliva tests acceptable
as evidence.
8. New regulations 207C to 207H inserted
After regulation 207B of the Principal Regulations insert—
"207C. Oral fluid testing devices
(1) The device prescribed for the purposes of section 55D of the
Act is the oral fluid testing device known as the SECURETEC
DRUGWIPE TWIN or the SECURETEC DRUGWIPE II TWIN.
(2) The devices prescribed for the purposes of section 55E of
the Act are—
(a) the oral fluid testing device known as the SECURETEC
DRUGWIPE II TWIN COMBO;
(b) the oral fluid testing device known as the Cozart
RapiScan.
Securetec Drug Detection - the distributor's rave.
In a world's first, Victorian motorists are being subjected to
random roadside saliva testing for illegal drugs. The DrugWipe®
rapid tests from Securetec are proudly and exclusively distributed
by Pathtech.
According to sources, the NSW Police will be using the same product.
"Thanks to leading-edge antibody detection technology, the
test can be applied non-invasively, using saliva. This means that
authorities can detect illicit substances such as cannabis and
methamphetamines quickly and reliably both at the road side and
in the station. This method has many advantages over urine sampling
and is much easier to handle for both the tester and the person
being tested.
The test using the Securetec DrugWipe II Twin THC/MET device
takes five minutes. A positive initial test is verified in the
drug bus using the Securetec device again with a sample divider.
If the second test indicates a positive result, the sample will
be sent to a laboratory for verification.
The drug testing devices are highly accurate and reliable, having
undergone rigorous testing.
Roadside drug testing promises to have a profound effect on the
safety of motorists. Although initially only two classes of drug
will be tested for, the DrugWipe devices can also detect nanogram
residues of opiates, cocaine and benzodiazepines. The future application
of these devices are of interest to customs and drug enforcement
agencies, prisons, and the workplace."
Go to this page to download and save an introduction
to Drug Wipe II Twin THC/MET (note file size is 13Mb).
http://www.pathtech.com.au/pathtech/home/consumer/drugdetection/securetec.sok
THAT'S ALL FOR NOW FOLKS!
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