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Substance Abuse Management. Regulatory Updates Tuesday March 31, 2009 Distance Learning Session. Welcome. Diana Byrnes, Substance Abuse Management Specialist Center for Urban Transportation Research (CUTR)
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Substance Abuse Management Regulatory Updates Tuesday March 31, 2009 Distance Learning Session
Welcome • Diana Byrnes, Substance Abuse Management Specialist • Center for Urban Transportation Research (CUTR) • Project Manager for the FDOT Substance Abuse Management Oversight and Technical Assistance Program • Transportation Safety Institute Associate Staff Instructor • Certified Substance Abuse Program Administrator (C-SAPA)
Distance Learning - Things to Remember • We can hear you too • Cell Phones • Other Conversations • Typing • Hold
Course Goal • To inform you of the drug and alcohol testing regulation amendments that went into effect on August 25, 2008 • To educate you in key areas of potential non-compliance within your testing program
Poll 1 Participant Level of Experience
Basics of Drug and Alcohol Testing • Regulations: • 49 CFR Part 655 Federal Transit Administration: Prevention of Alcohol Misuse and Prohibited Drug Use in Transit Operations • 49 CFR Part 40 US DOT Procedures for Transportation Workplace Drug and Alcohol Testing Programs
What does Part 655 tell us? • Defines Covered Employers • Defines Covered Employees • Defines the circumstances in which testing must occur (such as random rate, post accident criteria) • Establishes regulations concerning policy and training requirements • Defines the consequences for positive results and refusals to test (removal from s-s duty) • Conditions financial assistance to compliance (per OTETA)
What does Part 40 tell us? • The required procedures for the collection, analysis, MRO review, and reporting of drug and alcohol specimens • Safeguards the integrity of the program by establishing specific procedures for each step of the process • Must be consistent with US Department of Health and Human Services guidelines for federal workplace drug testing
Basics of Drug and Alcohol Testing • Test Types • Pre-employment(urine drug required, breath alcohol allowed) • Random(minimum rate is 25% urine drug 10% breath alcohol) • Post Accident(must always do both drug and alcohol!) • Reasonable Suspicion(urine drug or breath alcohol-depends on nature of suspicion) • Return to Duty(follow SAP instructions for test types) • Follow Up(follow SAP instructions for test type and frequency)
Basics of Drug Testing • DOT urine drug testing panel includes these five prohibited substances: • Amphetamines • Cocaine • Marijuana • Opiates • PCP • DOT panel can only include these five • Hair and blood are not acceptable DOT specimens
Basics of Urine Collection • Collectors must meet training qualifications in accordance with 40.33 • A Federal CCF must be used for all DOT collections • DOT urine collections must be “split” • Privacy enclosure must be free of potential contaminating agents, water sources and “hiding spots” • Bluing agent must be present in toilet water • Collection site must be secure (restricted access)
Basics of Laboratory • Labs must be certified by DHHS (Department of Health and Human Services) • A list is of certified labs is updated every month and published in the Federal Register during the first week of each month.
What happens at the Lab ? • Accessioning of specimen • Inspect condition of specimen • Review CCF for fatal or correctable flaws • Initial screening by immunoassay, includes specimen validity testing • Negative results report out • Non-negative results move on for further testing
Lab results reported to MRO • Negative Dilute with creatinine level between 5 and 20 ng/ml • Negative Dilute with creatinine level between 2 and 5 ng/ml • Positive or Positive Dilute • Adulterated • Substituted • Invalid
The Role of the MRO • MRO is the gatekeeper • Impartial, independent; protects the integrity of the testing process • Inspects MRO and Lab copies of CCF for errors • Obtains lab report inclusive of quantitative data • Interviews donor via telephone or in person • Recites Medical Miranda to donor • Verifies possible medical explanations • Has the authority to order additional testing, cancel a test, or deem a test to be invalid • Has the final word! Drug test results cannot be changed by anyone other than the MRO
Results from MRO Negative- no further action required, employee may begin or resume s-s duty Negative Dilute- follow policy regarding retesting, follow MRO instruction to recollect under direct observation (when creatinine in the 2-5 range) Positive with drug listed- remove employee immediately from s-s duty, follow policy Positive Dilute- POSITIVE, see above Cancelled- must be considered neither positive nor negative (follow MRO instruction, recollect under direct observation, second collection or no further action) Refusal to Test because of Adulterated or Substituted- remove employee from s-s duty, follow policy
Regulatory Updates Effective August 25, 2008
Video SpikeTV: Manswers
Available Products GOOGLEResults 1 - 10 of about 1,040,000 for beat a drugtest. (0.18 seconds)
Amendments- Background • Overall purpose: • To make DOT required drug testing harder to “beat”. • To require specimen validity testing at all DHHS certified laboratories • To enhance the direct observation procedures • The manufacturing of adulterants, urine substitutes and prosthetic devices have made this necessary
Breakdown of Amendments to Part 40 Specimen Validity Testing Required-40.89 • What it means: Laboratories must test specimens for adulterants and substitutions using DHHS guidelines • Who does it effect:Labs • What you need to do: Update your policy to reflect this change (FL DOT Model Policy includes this is Section 16)
Breakdown of Amendments to Part 40 Direct Observation Procedures Change • What it means: Whenever there is a specific reason to believe a donor is attempting to tamper with or evade a test, a recollection under direct observation must take place • Who does it effect: Donors and Collectors • What you need to do: Make policy changes (FL DOT Model Policy includes this in Section 15)
Breakdown of Amendments to Part 40 Three new behaviors that constitute a Refusal to Test • What does this mean:additional measures taken tosecure the process from those attempting to evade or tamper with tests Who does this effect: Donors, collectors, employers • What you need to do: YouMUST include all of the behaviors in your policy (FL DOT Model Policy lists them in Section 14)
Breakdown of Amendments to Part 40 MRO can use a medical evaluation to determine prohibited drug use following an invalid result • What it means: When a (-) result is required and only an invalid result can be produced via urine, this provides a means to obtaining a negative result • Who it effects: Donors who produce invalid results, MROs, Employers • What do you need to do: Add this language to your policy (FL DOT Model addresses this inSection 20)
Breakdown of Amendments to Part 40 Negative Dilute Retesting • What it means:When a negative dilute result with a creatinine level between 5ng/ml and 20 ng/ml is reported; you are authorized to conduct a second collection. The second collection may not be directly observed and is the final result. • Who it effects:Donors, Employers • What do you need to do:Add this language to your policy, implement consistently (reference FL DOT Model Section 17)
Additional Information Regarding Negative Dilute Results Negative Dilute Results with a creatinine level between 2 and 5 ng/ml require retest under direct observation • What it means:Specimen that the human body can rarely produce • Who does it effect:Donors, collectors, Employers • What do you need to do:Check results carefully, when levels are not indicated, contact MRO. Always follow MRO instructions on how to proceed
Breakdown of Amendments to Part 40 No Split Testing of Invalid results • What it means:Donors will not be able to request that their B bottle (split specimen) be tested at another lab when the A bottle produced an invalid result • Who it effects: Donors with invalid results • What you need to do: add statement to policy (reference FL DOT Model Policy Section 21)
Breakdown of Amendments to Part 40 Stop Publication of Lab Methods • What it means: laboratory testing and analysis methods will no longer be published • Who it effects: The multi-million dollar industry that manufactures products designed to “beat” DOT drug tests! • What you need to do: Nothing
Breakdown Lab Reports to DOT • What does it mean: drug testing laboratories must report to DOT semi-annual statistical summaries on all of their DOT testing • Who does it effect: Labs and DOT • What do you need to do: Nothing
Poll 2 Zero Tolerance vs 2nd Chance
Return to Duty and Follow Up Tests At this time there is an Administrative Stay on making these test types mandatory direct observation collections • What does this mean:Employer Option still remains to conduct these tests under direct observation • Who does this effect:Second Chance Employers • What do you need to do:Determine if your agency would like to exercise the option; add it to your policy; apply it consistently (FDOT Model Policy for Second Chance Agencies exercises this option)
Anticipated Problem No D.O.C.’s @ P.S.C.’s • What it means:LabCorp and Quest Patient Service Centers will no longer conduct directly observed collections • Who it effects:Employers of both Zero Tolerance and Second Chance programs • What you need to do:Establish alternate collection site resources; and/or identify both a male and female representative from your agency that is willing to be an observer
Poll 3 Laboratory Patient Service Center
Poll 4 Directly Observed Collection
Action Items for Employers • Policy Items that MUST be addressed: • Specimen Validity Testing Required • Addition of three new behaviors that constitute a refusal to test • Circumstances that lead to a directly observed collection • Directly observed collection procedures “will be in accordance with 49CFR Part 40, as amended” • If second chance: RTD and Follow Up direct observation option
Action Items for Employers • Contact collection sites; ask if they are aware of the changes to Part 40 and how they would handle a directly observed collection • Identify an Agency Representative who is willing to be an observer when a routine collection at a PSC turns into a DOC (you’ll need one male & one female)
Five of the Most Common Areas of Non-Compliance And how to avoid them!
#1Most Common Area of Non-Compliance • Collection Sites: the weakest link • Collection Site compliance= your compliance • Provide collectors with DOT collection guidelines and awareness resources (such as the new DOT video: 10 Steps to Collection Site Security and Integrity available on the ODAPC website) • Inspect sites for security measures • Audit the site informally when you are called for testing (reference: FDOT’s Collection Site Monitoring Toolkit) • Conduct unannounced visits that include an interview with a site staff member
#2 Most Common Area of Non-Compliance • Random Testing • Must cover all hours of operation and all days of operation (weekends and holidays) • Must be spread throughout entire testing period • Never “group test” • Never give advanced notice to employees • Use alternate selections properly • Cancelled tests do not count toward minimums • Update employee testing pool prior to each draw
# 3 Most Common Area of Non-Compliance • Post Accident Testing Decisions • Use decision and documentation form every time- whether or not you test • Use only the FTA criteria to decide to test/or not • Always conduct BOTH drug and alcohol tests • Train your supervisors • Make arrangements in advance for after hours testing resources • Conduct NON DOT testing if your agency feels testing is always necessary following an accident
#4 Most Common Area of Non-Compliance • Policy Issues: • Substance Abuse Policy does not include all of the FTA required elements • Policy items included under an agency’s own authority contradict DOT/FTA regulations (e.g.; FTA post accident criteria not used– testing conducted in all cases) • Failure to document employee receipt of policy revisions/updates
# 5 Most Common Area of Non-Compliance • Pre-employment Background Checks-40.25 • Get consent form signed by employee (see handout) • Check with DOT covered employers going back 2 years • Positive drug tests, Positive alcohol tests or any refusals to test • Make at least three attempts, document attempts • If employee’s past reveals a previous violation, employee must complete SAP evaluation, treatment and RTD before performing s-s duty
Resources • ODAPC website: http://www.dot.gov/ost/dapc/video.html • What to get here: • New video and posters on collection site security and integrity • Collection instructions for direct observation • DOT Employer and DOT Employee Handbooks about the drug and alcohol testing program • Updated Part 40 and FAQs • List of certified labs
Resources Continued • FDOT/CUTR Substance Abuse Management Resource Site http://www.cutr.usf.edu/byrnessamsite • What to get here: • FDOT Model Policies for Zero Tolerance and Second Chance agencies • Collection Site Monitoring Toolkit • Collector Questionnaire for Employer-Collector Interview • Training Presentations • Notices of Upcoming Training Opportunities • Clean, Sober and Safe training video
This concludes our session~Thank you for joining us! Please feel free to contact me: Diana Byrnes byrnes@cutr.usf.edu 813-426-6980