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In the 1950s, employers spooked by the Red
Menace instituted mandatory loyalty oaths, forcing employees to forswear any
ties to communism. In the 1990s, the drug scourge had replaced communism as the
great looming societal threat, and the pee-in-a-cup employee drug screen became
de rigueur.
But the march of time has a way of
exposing baseless hysteria. Just as the loyalty oath has been shelved as an
overblown reaction to the Cold War, so soon will the drug test become an
abandoned relic of the war on drugs.
While drug testing exploded during the
past decade, with the rate of major U.S. companies engaging in it rising from 21
percent in 1987 to 81 percent in 1996, there are compelling reasons why drug
testing in corporate America has plateaued and may be starting to decline.
Primary among them is that the need for massive drug screening was based on junk
science to begin with, a fact that is becoming self-evident to cost-conscious
human resources departments.
We've all heard the statistics:
Drug-abusing employees cause $100-billion in lost productivity. Workers who use
drugs have 2.5 times more absences, are 3.6 times more likely to have an
accident in the workplace and are five times more likely to file a claim for
worker compensation. These facts and figures appear to directly impact the
bottom line. Ignoring such a serious drag on the workplace would be
irresponsible. So businesses bought in big time -- to the tune of $300-million
per year for drug testing programs alone.
The problem is, the facts are fiction
How To Pass A Swab Drug Test.
A report by the American Civil Liberties
Union investigating the derivation of the numbers exposes the anatomy of a lie.
The lost productivity figures that government officials and the drug-testing
industry waved around to pronounce a crisis were based on little more than
wishful thinking.
Promoters of drug testing in the 1980s
claimed that an annual $33-billion in lost productivity could be attributable to
drug users in the workplace. That statistic came from a 1984 report by the
Research Triangle Institute, a research organization based in North Carolina. In
the government-funded study, researchers compared the yearly income of
households that contained someone who either currently or at one time used
marijuana daily with the annual income of all other households. On average it
was found that the marijuana-using household earned less income. That difference
was then multiplied by the number of daily marijuana users in the work force --
totaling $33-billion -- which became the amount of the "lost productivity"
attributable to drugs. Over time the figure was increased to $60-billion and
then $100-billion "to control for the estimated cost of inflation."
According to Lewis Maltby, president of
the National Workrights Institute in Princeton, N.J., and the author of the
ACLU's report, "RTI's methodology is so bad that it's dishonest." The
researchers didn't even attempt to compare people with similar earning
capacities. "The entire difference in household income between a brain surgeon
who drinks martinis and a ditch digger who smokes marijuana," said Maltby,"was
attributed to marijuana smoking."
Even more preposterous is that the lost
productivity figure was promoted as definitive proof of the evil drugs do,
despite the other findings of the RTI study that found no income differential
between households with and without current users of marijuana. There was also
no difference in the incomes of households with current or former users of
illicit drugs other than marijuana and non-drug-using households.
The excessive absenteeism, workplace
accidents and worker compensation claims were no sounder. Maltby's report
tracked the first use of those figures to a 1972 speech given by an unidentified
speaker to executives at the Firestone Tire & Rubber Co. Like the game in which
each time a message gets passed it gets altered, by 1983 that speech had
transmogrified into the non-existent "Firestone Study" and was widely pointed to
as an authoritative source for research findings that drug-using employees were
absent more often and caused more on-the-job accidents.
When you examine the real science, the
numbers tell a very different story. The National Academy of Sciences published
a report in 1994 that analyzed the actual empirical evidence.
Its conclusion? "The data ... do not
provide clear evidence of the deleterious effects of drugs other than alcohol on
safety and other job performance indicators."
Government officials have a vested
interest in getting corporate America to underwrite their war on drugs. To that
end they've disingenuously lumped together employees who come to work impaired
by drug use or alcohol with employees who use drugs off the job, labeling them
collectively bad for business. The real questions for managers today are how
much lost productivity is attributable to resources diverted for universal or
random drug testing and how many excellent employees have been fired or never
hired due to invasive drug screenings? Savvy stockholders might be interested.
© St. Petersburg Times, published January
30, 2000
How To Pass A Swab Drug Test
Information From Always Test Clean.
How to pass a
drug test is the question more and more people are faced with each and every day. Employee
screenings are on the rise, corporations have
their own rules and
random drug testing is often the condition of employment.
If this is the major concern in your life, you have come to the
right place. ATC products will shield you from detection of
controlled substances, prescription and non-prescription preparations, as well as other
things you might not want people to know about like tobacco usage. For
More Information check out our information to pass drug
test
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