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November 17th, 2010
Drug Test Costs
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Drug Test Costs.
Drug Tests are a debatable and contentious issue due to a host of factors. The intention of these tests is certainly benign – to discourage the use of drugs. Drug use is a major problem and many people regard it as the number one problem confronting the nation. The problem is a multi dimensional one – personal, professional and societal. Drug tests come with a deterrent effect. The fear of testing positive in a drug test or actually testing positive in one discourages many potential and existing drug users from using drugs. However drug tests costs is exorbitant – and this is not the only thing that repels them to employers.
An average drug test costs $42 per person. And this does not include the cost of hiring personnel to conduct the initial screening test and possibly the confirmatory test later. This also does not include the cost of keeping the results confidential. Apart from this many people know that using drug test system cleaner can help you pass the test even if you are a consumer of drugs. In this case the entire expenses will go waste and the intention of the drug test will also be defeated. Then there is the issue of false positives – people testing positive even though they are not drug users. This happens when the person consumes certain medicines or foodstuffs that induce such a result. A false positive can also result from passive drug exposure. Such a result necessitates a confirmatory drug test that increases the expense.
Another factor running against drug tests is that cheaper alternatives are able to do a much better job. For e.g. a questionnaire was able to detect 94 out of 100 drug users in an Oklahoma Study. This is far cheaper than the cost to detect one drug user in a haystack of non users. When this criterion is applied i.e. when the expense per positive test is calculated it goes to around $77,000 for government employees (Source: Congressional Estimate). And drug tests cannot detect the use of alcohol – something that is used more frequently and more widely than drugs.
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