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- From: stafford@ux1.cso.uiuc.edu (Gale)
- Newsgroups: alt.drugs,talk.politics.drugs
- Subject: AP article: New drug tests use hair
- Date: 15 Jun 1994 23:05:53 GMT
- Message-ID: <2to1gh$fkr@vixen.cso.uiuc.edu>
-
-
- You can find another copy of this on clari.news.drugs.
- ------------------------------------------------------------------------
- CAMBRIDGE, Mass. (AP) -- Chaparral Steel Co. was dissatisfied
- with its employee drug testing program. Urinalysis revealed only if
- drugs had been used within days of the test -- and there was always
- a concern about cheating.
- ``It got to the point that the guys had to go to the bathroom
- with a nurse looking through the window,'' said Victor Swaim,
- protective services supervisor for the Midlothian, Texas-based
- company.
- So the steelmaker hired Psychemedics Corp., a company that uses
- hair samples to test for drugs.
- With the Cambridge-based company's system, Chaparral could learn
- if employees had used drugs within the past three months. And,
- Swain said, workers were happy to be spared the humiliation of
- urinalysis.
- By courting companies like Chaparral, Psychemedics is hoping to
- grab a piece of the now-booming market for drug testing.
- Psychemedics argues its hair-testing method is superior. But it's a
- tough market to crack.
- The number of companies testing employees for drugs has more
- than tripled since 1987, according to the American Management
- Association. But employers are generally satisfied with their
- programs and have little incentive to change, said Eric Greenberg
- of the New York-based association.
- Hair drug testing costs up to $65, more than double the typical
- cost of urinalysis.
- There are other hurdles for hair testing, too. Some say it is
- unreliable, biased against blacks and an invasion of privacy. But
- Psychemedics' president and chief executive officer, Raymond
- Kubacki, dismisses those complaints.
- ``There just seems to be a lot of misinformation and that seems
- to have increased dramatically with our success,'' he said.
- During the past two years, Psychemedics has doubled its
- corporate clients to 350. It reported its first annual profit last
- year, $953,000, or 5 cents a share, following a loss of $522,000,
- or 3 cents a share, in 1992.
- Revenue came to $6.6 million, up from $4 million in 1992.
- But while Psychemedics is the market leader in hair testing, the
- business makes up little more than 1 percent of the entire
- drug-testing industry, the management association says.
- Psychemedics, which is traded publicly on the Nasdaq stock
- market, was founded in 1987. Among its main investors are leaders
- of Blockbuster Entertainment Corp., including chairman H. Wayne
- Huizenga.
- Psychemedics' hair-testing process is based on the principle
- that whenever drugs are consumed, traces enter the bloodstream and
- reach the hair.
- ``You can't bleach it out or dye it out. It's there
- permanently,'' Kubacki said.
- It works like this: About 50 hairs, the width of a pencil point,
- are cut from near an employee's scalp and are shipped to a
- laboratory in Culver City, Calif. There, they are washed and
- liquefied, then tested for specific drugs. Psychemedics tests the
- 1 1/2 inches closest to the scalp, representing the most recent three
- months of growth.
- Some are critical of the technique.
- The American Civil Liberties Union, which opposes all employee
- drug testing, argues that employers have no right to know if
- workers used drugs three months previously, said Milind Shah, a
- senior fellow for the group.
- Some say that drugs are more likely to be detected in dark hair,
- thus representing discrimination against blacks.
- The ACLU and others argue hair testing is too likely to detect
- drugs even if workers didn't use any. Just being in a room where
- drugs are smoked could be enough for a false positive, critics say.
- Dr. Edward Cone, chief of the chemistry and drug metabolism
- section at the National Institute of Drug Abuse in Baltimore,
- worries that hair ``being a good filter that it is, will pick up
- the residues in the air.'' The Navy once considered using hair for
- drug testing, but rejected the idea because of concerns about false
- positives.
- But Kubacki said false positives are virtually impossible with
- Psychemedics' process.
- ``In order to get enough in your hair that it would register,
- you would have to be in a phone booth with seven people smoking
- marijuana or crack for eight hours a day for a week,'' he said.
- His view is backed by Tom Mieczkowski, a criminology professor
- at the University of South Florida. Mieczkowski said his studies
- have found hair drug testing is more effective at detecting the use
- of cannabis derivatives, such as marijuana or hashish. And false
- positives, he said, are unlikely.
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