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Drug tests don't lie, people do. That's
what Michelle Dunson used to think back when she administered urine tests for a
temp agency near Toledo, Ohio. Sometimes when she told applicants they'd failed,
the response would be wide-eyed silence, then tears and denial. She offered them
tissue, but little sympathy.
Dunson later took a job with Whirlpool,
where she was injured two years ago. When she returned, she tested positive for
an opiate and was fired-even though a note from her doctor outlined her
prescriptions for a non-narcotic painkiller, which she believes threw off the
test. She has a wrongful-termination suit pending against Whirlpool, which
stands by its testing. "I feel tremendous guilt now when I think of those who
came to me nearly hysterical, saying they did not do drugs," says Dunson. "I
think: My God, at least a few of them were probably telling the truth."
NEWS YOU CAN USE
· Robitussin and diet pills can give a
false reading for amphetamines.
· Ibuprofen and various antibiotics can
appear to be marijuana.
· Kidney infection and diabetes can cause
you to test positive for cocaine.
· Migraine medications and
anti-depressants can look like LSD
More Tips For Test Takers
Dunson can be forgiven for believing drug
test results were the gospel truth. The tests are often heralded as infallible,
and many private and government employers, along with school principals and
judges, put their faith in them. Half of major U.S. firms now test their
employees, and more than 500 school districts have screening programs. But
reliably picking up drug traces that linger days after a user's last high, while
ignoring contaminants and similar-looking compounds in medicine and food, is a
tall order for even the best technology. In the real world, technical glitches
can mean mistakes-so-called false positives.
Wide net. For employers who test to deter
drug use, which they say leads to a safer, more productive workplace, so-so
accuracy might be enough. But it comes at a high cost in reputations and
livelihoods for those falsely accused. "Innocent people are being mislabeled
because of unreliable products designed to cast a wide net," says Steven Karch,
a medical researcher and author of Karch's Pathology of Drug Abuse.
The error rates are likely to rise. While
the traditional method-lab-based urine testing-can be highly reliable when done
carefully, the fastest-growing segment of the drug-testing industry consists of
newer and often more error-prone tests. On-site urine testing appeals to private
employers because it gives results in minutes and can cost as little as $3 per
screening. Yet studies of the cheapest of these tests, designed to pick up a
single drug type such as amphetamines, show they give the right answer as little
as one third of the time. Other new tests, which rely on lab analysis of hair
and sweat, can be a powerful probe of drug use-but can also be fooled by stray
drug molecules from the environment. All these tests may get a major boost from
the proposed new federal guidelines for drug testing, expected to be published
later this year. The rules, which serve as the model for many state and private
employers as well, will allow new tests, including on-site urine screens and
lab-based sweat patch and hair tests, to be used for screening 10 million
federal workers and contractors.
Currently, laboratory urine testing-the
"gold standard" test-is the only type allowed for federal employees. Samples are
probed with antibodies for THC (marijuana), cocaine, opiates, PCP, and
amphetamines, and checked to be sure they aren't doctored or too dilute. When a
worker tests positive, the federal program mandates a second, more accurate
confirmation test called gas chromatography-mass spectrometry, GC-MS, along with
an interview with a medical review officer to be sure that another substance
isn't causing a false positive. The sample's chain of custody is carefully
documented as well.
Even GC-MS is not perfect, however. The
test works by extracting and heating molecules from a sample and using an
electric field to separate and identify them. Kent Holtorf, a physician and
expert on drug-testing accuracy, says he got 1,500 calls last year from people
asking for help with what they said were lab errors. He says that when a lab
uses GC-MS to identify the entire range of molecules, it is 95 percent to 99
percent accurate. But Holtorf says labs don't always use the equipment to its
full advantage. "Accuracy rates are going down, not up, as employers contract
with the lowest-bidding lab," he says. It's cheaper to use GC-MS to look only
for a few fragments of the drug molecules, which raises the risk of mistaking
legitimate medicines, herbs, and foods like poppy seeds for illegal drugs.
The drug-testing industry dismisses these
concerns. "People always come up with cockamamie stories about how their test
result is wrong," says Paul Rust, a vice president at Quest Diagnostics. "But
the GC-MS process is 100 percent accurate." Not quite, says Michael Martin, who
is HIV-positive and takes the prescription drug Sustiva. The Worcester, Mass.,
resident says he had to take a pre-employment urine test after he was offered a
job at Sears. He presented a doctor's letter saying his medication could cause
him to test positive for pot. When just that happened, Sears rescinded the
offer. "I want to work so badly I can taste it," says Martin. "But I can't stop
taking my prescription just to test clean."
Sears, which is investigating Martin's
case, says its policy is to confirm positive results with a second test. But at
many companies, employees who fail the initial screen get no second chance.
"Most employers, even those who use a lab, don't confirm positives on
pre-employment tests," says David Evans, director of the National On-Site
Testing Association. "It wouldn't be a financially smart thing to do." And, in
most cases, it's perfectly legal not to. There are no regulations, other than a
smattering of state laws, regarding testing of non-government workers.
Nor has there been tough scrutiny of the
newer drug-testing technologies. "The lack of scientific studies on these
devices is most surprising," says Amanda Jenkins, co-author of the new book
On-Site Drug Testing. The U.S. Food and Drug Administration will approve a test
based solely on a company's own studies. Still, drug-testing veterans, some
independent studies, and even the makers' own data suggest that three leading
"alternative technologies" can be disturbingly error prone.
Pass Any Drug Test - On-site testing. Like lab assays, these
tests work by combining urine with antibodies. If the test is negative, a line
appears on a test strip. But seeing the lines can be a judgment call, and some
products are especially hard to read. "We stopped using a few tests because some
people would see a line where others wouldn't," says Brian Walters of Premier
Drug Testing in Russell Springs, Ky. In one study, 17 common on-site tests were
used to analyze specimens; most contained either no drugs or trace amounts. The
accuracy ranged from 52 percent to 82 percent.
Sweat patch. In this test, a Band-Aid-like
patch attached to the skin collects sweat for up to seven days and is later
lab-tested for drug residue. It's tough to cheat-if the patch is removed, it
can't be reattached-and the test is often used in parole, probation, and
child-custody cases to determine whether a user has been rehabilitated. But
studies by the U.S. Naval Research Lab and the patch manufacturer itself showed
that drug molecules from outside sources-such as clothes or other people-can
penetrate the patch and trigger a false positive. The sole maker, PharmChem,
says both studies exposed the patch to unrealistically high levels of
contamination. "Those were just not real-world situations," says Neil Fortner,
PharmChem's chief scientific officer. But a federal court in New York recently
ruled that the sweat patch "is susceptible to outside contamination."
Sheryl Woodhall thinks that's what cost
her custody of her two youngest children. She wore the patches to prove she was
no longer a methamphetamine addict. But after she flunked seven of eight tests,
her kids were placed permanently in foster care, and she was forbidden to
contact them. During the same period, Woodhall says she tested negative on
dozens of urine screens, done under observation so she couldn't cheat.
Pass Any Drug Test Hair tests. Lab analysis of 1.5-inch long
strands of hair cut near the scalp can give a drug history covering 90 days,
compared with only a few days for most drugs in urine tests. Psychemedics, the
largest hair tester, says 140 schools and 2,300 corporate clients use its
services. But hair testing is also the most controversial of the new
technologies because of concerns that it is discriminatory and can be thrown off
by contaminants. Several studies by the National Institute of Drug Abuse show
that some drug molecules, whether ingested or picked up from the environment,
have an affinity for the pigment melanin and bind more strongly to dark hair
than light. "If two employees use cocaine, the blond might barely test negative,
and the other will get caught," says Robert Stephenson of the Substance Abuse
and Mental Health Services Administration.
Raymond Kubacki, president of
Psychemedics, dismisses concerns about discrimination and says a series of
washes removes contaminants from hair samples. "You could be in a crack den and
you won't test positive." But Ronnie Jones, a Boston police officer for 20
years, blames contamination for a marginally positive result for cocaine he got
on a hair test last March. Jones-nicknamed "the deacon" for his Bible reading
and clean living-submitted a second hair sample the same day, which tested
negative. Although the company downplays the contamination risk, Kubacki says it
has begun testing for drug metabolites, the fingerprints left after drugs are
processed by the body, rather than just the parent substances.
So far there have been few technical
challenges to another new test, which relies on analysis of a saliva sample.
Because drugs show up in saliva more quickly than in urine, hair, and sweat, the
test may reveal whether a person is currently high, making it useful for
post-accident testing, but it is just beginning to catch on - - and like the
other tests, it will get its real trial in the real world, where jobs and
reputations will hinge on the right answer.
Pass Any 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
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information to pass drug test
ing.
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