New Drug and Alcohol Testing Regulations
Transcription
New Drug and Alcohol Testing Regulations
New Drug and Alcohol Testing Regulations Presented by Lee Okurowski, MD New England Baptist Hospital Occupational Medicine Center Copyright 2011 by OEHN Discussion Topics This document discusses the New Procedures for Transportation Workplace Drug and Alcohol Testing Programs focusing on the following areas: • • • • • Drug Testing Guidelines Instrumented Initial Test Facility (IITF) Medical Review Officer Rules Definitions Additional Urine Specimen Collection Guidelines • Focus of discussion is DOT vs. other federal drug testing programs Page 22 Slide Procedures for Transportation Workplace Drug and Alcohol Testing Programs DEPARTMENT OF TRANSPORTATION Office of the Secretary 49 CFR Part 40 [Docket OST–2010–0026] RIN 2105–AD95 Revisions Effective 10/1/10 DOT Changes Drug Testing Procedures The Department of Transportation (the Department or DOT) is amending certain provisions of its drug testing procedures dealing with laboratory testing of urine specimens. Some of the changes will also affect the training of and procedures used by Medical Review Officers. The changes are intended to create consistency with many, but not all, of the new requirements established by the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services. This rule is effective October 1, 2010. Page 4 Omnibus Transportation Employee Testing Act of 1991 The Department is required by the Omnibus Transportation Employees Testing Act (Omnibus Act) to follow the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) requirements for the testing procedures/protocols and drugs for which we test However, where the Omnibus Act limits or otherwise prohibits the Department from following the HHS, the Department (DOT) must decline to follow the lead of HHS. THIS CAN CREATE CONFUSION!!! Page 5 DOT Publishes Final Rule - Effective October 1, 2010--Summary 1) The Department is required by the Omnibus Transportation Employees Testing Act (Omnibus Act) to follow the HHS requirements for the testing procedures/protocols and drugs for which DOT tests. 2) Primary laboratory requirements in this final rule include: - Testing for MDMA (aka. Ecstasy); - Lowering cutoff levels for cocaine and amphetamines; - Conducting mandatory initial testing for heroin; 3) The Department brought several testing definitions inline with those of HHS. Page 6 DOT Publishes Final Rule - Effective October 1, 2010--Summary 4) Each Medical Review Officer (MRO) will need to be requalified – including passing an examination given by an MRO training organization - every five years. The Final Rule eliminated the requirement for each MRO to take 12 hours of continuing education every three years. 5) An MRO will not need to be trained by an HHS-approved MRO training organization as long as the MRO meets DOT‘s qualification and requalification training requirements. 6) MRO recordkeeping requirements did not change from the five years for non-negatives and one year for negatives. Page 7 DOT Publishes Final Rule - Effective October 1, 2010--Summary 7) The Final Rule does not allow the use of HHS-Certified Instrumented Initial Testing Facilities (IITFs) to conduct initial drug testing because the Omnibus Act requires laboratories to be able to perform both initial and confirmation testing but IITFs cannot conduct confirmation testing. Page 8 New Drug Testing Guidelines Ecstasy (Methylenedioxymethamphetamine or MDMA). The initial screening cut-off concentration for MDMA will be 500 ng/ml and the confirmatory cut-off concentration will be 250 ng/ml for MDMA, as well as Methylenedioxyamphetamine (MDA) and Methylenedioxyethylamphetamine (MDEA), drugs that are chemically similar to Ecstasy The drug test cutoff concentrations for cocaine have been lowered. The initial screening test cutoff drops from 300 ng/ml to 150 ng/ml, and the confirmatory test cutoff concentration has been lowered from 150 ng/ml to 100 ng/ml Page 9 New Drug Testing Guidelines The drug test cutoff concentrations for amphetamines have been lowered. The initial screening test cutoff has been lowered from 1,000 ng/ml to 500 ng/ml, and the confirmatory drug test cutoff concentration has been lowered from 500 ng/ml to 250 ng/ml; and Initial drug testing for 6-acetylmorphine (―6-AM,‖ a unique metabolite of heroin, considered to be definitive proof of heroin use) is now required. Specific rules have been added to address the way in which Medical Review Officers (―MROs‖) analyze and verify confirmed positive drug test results for 6-AM, codeine, and morphine. Page 10 Two New Initial Drug Test Analytes 6-Acetylmorphine (6AM) - heroin metabolite Revised Guidelines will require initial testing of all specimens for 6-AM, regardless of morphine concentration Current Guidelines only require confirmatory 6-AM testing of all morphine positive (> or = 2,000 ng/mL) specimens Page 11 Revised Cut-Offs for Test Initial test cutoff concentration Confirmatory test analyte Confirmatory test cutoff concentration Marijuana metabolites 50 ng/mL THCA1 15 ng/mL. Cocaine metabolites 150 ng/mL Benzoylecgonine 100 ng/mL. 2000 ng/mL Codeine 2000 ng/mL. Morphine 2000 ng/mL. Initial test analyte Opiate metabolites Codeine/Morphine2 6–Acetylmorphine 10 ng/mL 6–Acetylmorphine 10 ng/mL. Phencyclidine 25 ng/mL Phencyclidine 25 ng/mL. 500 ng/mL Amphetamine 250 ng/mL. Methamphetamine5 250 ng/mL. MDMA 250 ng/mL. MDA7 250 ng/mL. Amphetamines3 AMP/MAMP4 MDMA6 500 ng/mL MDEA8 Page 12 250 ng/mL MDMA RS)-1(benzo[d][ 1,3]dioxol5-yl)-Nmethylprop an-2-amine Page 13 MDMA--Ecstasy Crystal Meth/ Ecstacy Methadone Lab Page 14 MDMA • • • • • • • • First synthesized by Merck in 1912 Euphoria Sense of intimacy Anxiety Fatigue Impaired attention Dizziness Insomnia • • • • • • Hepatic metabolism Half-Life 6-10 hours Excretion renal Neurotoxic? Hyperthermia Dehydration Page 15 Street Names for MDMA-Ecstasy 007s 2CE 2CI 4 Dot 69s Adam B-bombs Batmans Bean Bens Benzedrine Bermuda triangles Bibs Biphetamine Blue kisses Blue lips Blue nile Boat Bump up Bumping up Candy flipping on a string Candy Raver Candy-flipping Care bears Page 16 Street Names for MDMA-Ecstasy—Cont. Cat in the hats Charge+ Charity Chocolate Chip Cookies Chrystal methadrine Clarity Cloud nine Cristal (Spanish) Dead road Debs Decadence Dex Dexedrine Diamonds Disco biscuit Disco biscuits Doctor Dolls Domex Draf Drivers E E-bombs Page 17 Street Names for MDMA-Ecstasy—Cont. E-puddle E-tard Ecstasy Egyptians Elephant flipping Elephants Essence Eve Exiticity Fastin Flipping Flower flipping Four leaf clover Gaggler Go Green triangles Greenies Gum GWM H - bomb Hammerheading Happy drug Happy pill Hawkers Herbal bliss Page 18 Street Names for MDMA-Ecstasy—Cont. Hippieflip Hug Hug drug Hugs and Kisses Hydro Hype Iboga Ice Igloo Ivory wave Jellies Jerry Garcias K-lots Kitty flipping Kleenex Letter biscuits Love drug Love flipping Love pill Love trip Lover's speed Lovers' special MAO MDM MDMA Mercedes Page 19 Street Names for MDMA-Ecstasy—Cont. Methedrine Mini beans Mitsubishi Monoamine oxidase Moonstone Morning shot Nexus flipping Nineteen NOX Ocean burst On the ball Orange bandits P and P Parachute down Party and play Party pack Peace Peeper(s) Piggybacking Pikachu Pink panthers Playboy bunnies Playboys Pollutants Pure ivory Purple wave Page 20 Street Names for MDMA-Ecstasy—Cont. Rave energy Red devils Rib Ritual spirit Roca (Spanish) Rolling Rolls Royce Running Scooby snacks Sextasy Shabu Slammin'/Slamming Smurfs Snackies Speed for lovers Speedballing Speedies Spivias Stacking Stacks Stars Strawberry shortcake Super X Supermans Swans Sweeties Page 21 Street Names for MDMA-Ecstasy—Cont. Tabs Tachas Tens Tom and Jerries Triple crowns Triple rolexes Triple stacks Troll Tutus Tweety Birds U.S.P. Ultimate Xphoria Ultimate Xphoria Vanilla sky Wafers Waffle dust Whiffledust White diamonds White dove White Nothing Wigits X X-ing X-Pills XTC Page 22 New Confirmatory Test Analytes of Ecstasy Methylenedioxymethamphetamine (MDMA) Ecstasy Methylenedioxyamphetamine (MDA) Methylenedioxyethylamphetamine (MDEA) Page 23 MDMA vs. Synthetic Opioids Hydromorphone??? Hydrocodone??? Oxycodone??? Oxymorphone??? Page 24 Instrumented Initial Test Facility (IITF) The Final Rule does not allow the use of HHS-Certified Instrumented Initial Testing Facilities (IITFs) to conduct initial drug testing because the Omnibus Act requires laboratories to be able to perform both initial and confirmation testing but IITFs cannot conduct confirmation testing. Page 25 New Medical Review Officer (MRO) Rules Each Medical Review Officer (MRO) will need to be requalified including passing an examination given by an MRO training organization - every five years. An MRO will not need to be trained by an HHSapproved MRO training organization as long as the MRO meets DOTs qualification and requalification training requirements. The Final Rule eliminated the requirement for each MRO to take 12 hours of continuing education every three years. MRO recordkeeping requirements did not change from the five years for non-negatives and one year for negatives. Page 26 New Definitions The Department brought several testing definitions in-line with those of HHS. Adulterated specimen Limit of Detection (LOD) Confirmatory drug test Limit of Quantitation Initial drug test (also known as a ‗‗Screening drug test‘‘) Negative result Initial specimen validity test Reconfirmed Invalid drug test Split specimen collection Positive result Rejected for testing Laboratory Page 27 Urine Specimen Collection Guidelines United States Department of Transportation Office of Drug and Alcohol Policy and Compliance Revised October 1, 2010 Section 4. Federal Drug Testing Custody And Control Form (CCF) The collector is permitted to use the old CCF until September 30, 2011. When the old CCF is used on or before September 30, 2011 the following new rule must be adhered: The collector is to write in the ―Remarks‖ section in Step 2 on Copy 1 of the CCF, the specific DOT Agency under whose authority the specimen is collected. The DOT Agency designation is a new feature on the CCF. So, if an old CCF is used and the employee‘s specimen is collected under, for example, the authority of the FMCSA regulation, the collector will write in ―DOT-FMCSA‖ in the ―Remarks‖ section in Step 2 of the CCF. Page 29 Section 4. (cont.) Test Facility Copy - accompanies the specimen to the laboratory The collector is to check the DOT Agency whose authority the specimen is collected. For example, if the employee‘s specimen is collected under the authority of the Federal Motor Carrier Safety Administration (FMCSA) regulation, the collector would check the ―DOT‖ and ―FMCSA‖ boxes. Page 30 Section 5. Information employers provide to collectors 49 CFR Part 40 requires the employer or their service agent – for example a C/TPA -- to ensure the collector has the following information when conducting a urine specimen collection for them: (a) Full name of the employee being tested. (b) Employee SSN or ID number. (c) Laboratory name and address (can be pre-printed on the CCF). (d) Employer name, address, phone number, and fax number (this can be pre-printed on the CCF at Step 1-A). (e) DER name and telephone number (and C/TPA, where applicable). Page 31 Section 5 (cont.) (f) MRO name, address, phone number, and fax number (can be pre-printed on the CCF at Step 1-B). (g) The DOT Agency which regulates the employee‘s safetysensitive duties (the checkmark can pre-printed in the appropriate box on the CCF at Step 1-D) (h) Test reason, as appropriate: Pre-employment; Random; Reasonable Suspicion/Reasonable Cause; Post-Accident; Return-toDuty; and Follow-up. (i) Whether the test is to be observed or not [see 40.67(a) & (b)]. (j) (Optional) C/TPA name, address, phone, and fax number (can be pre-printed on the CCF). Page 32 Section 7. Collection Procedures New Note: The CCF may be pre-printed with the DOT and Agency designation boxes already checked. If it is not, the employer must provide this information to the collector before the collection. Page 33 Old Federal Drug Testing Custody and Control Form Page 34 New Federal Drug Testing Custody and Control Form Page 35 The Final Rule was Effective October 1, 2010 SAMSHA Website: Full of Many Resources http://www.workplace.samhsa.gov or http://www.drugfreeworkplace.gov Drug Testing General Drug-Free Workplace Programs Federal Workplace Drug Testing Programs Young Adults in the Workplace (YIW) Prevention Research and Intervention Workplace Health, Wellness, and Safety Page 37 Questions? Page 38 References (cont) Review of Significant Changes in the Revised Mandatory Guidelines for Federal Workplace Drug Testing Programs Effective Date: May 1, 2010, Donna M. Bush, Ph.D., D-ABFT Drug Testing Team Leader, Division of Workplace Programs, Center for Substance Abuse Prevention, SAMHSA; http://nac.samhsa.gov/DTAB/Presentations/June09/D onnaBushDTAB06.02-508.ppt#406,5,SAMHSA Has Oversight Responsibility of Federal Agency Drug-Free Workplace Programs Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 157 / Monday, August 16, 2010 / Rules and Regulations, 49850-49864, http://edocket.access.gpo.gov/2010/pdf/201020095.pdf Page 39