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1.
Which drugs can you detect in oral fluid?
The Intercept® oral fluid drug testing service, can detect the NIDA-5 drug panel (marijuana, cocaine,
opiates, amphetamines, and PCP) which represent the most
common drugs requested by employers for workplace drug testing.
Additional drug tests will be added to service the needs
of the criminal justice market.
2. How does the detection window for oral fluid testing
compare with other methods?
Just like traditional urine testing, the window in oral
fluid testing is different for each drug. What we have found
interesting is that oral fluid testing identifies recent
usage - during the first four hours after drug use - that
can be missed by urine testing. For most drugs, the window
of detection in oral fluid is about one-to-three days. By
contrast, urine testing relies on drug metabolites retained
in the body's waste supply and may detect some drugs for
a longer period.
3. What methodology do you employ?
Oral fluid samples are first screened in a laboratory using
enzyme immunoassay technology, proven reliable for routine
drug testing. Any samples that test positive in the screening
process are then subjected to gas chromatography / mass
spectrometry / mass spectrometry (GC/MS/MS), the latest
in drug confirmation technology. This tandem "MS", as it
is called, provides the most sensitive fingerprint of the
drug target available.
4. How is the data reported?
As with all laboratory-based testing, results are logged
a computerized information system and electronically
reported to the client or MRO if appropriate.
5. Can an oral fluid test be beaten?
We have studied a wide range of adulterants and have not
found any that can beat our test. Of course, donors may
attempt to introduce something onto the pad or collection
vial. This risk is highly unlikely since every collection
is directly and easily observed.
6. Who collects the sample?
The beauty of oral fluid testing is that the donor collects
his or her own sample under direct visual supervision. The
donor places the collection pad in his or her cheek and
gum for at least two minutes. Once the absorbent collection
pad is saturated, it is placed in a vial, the handle of
the collection device is snapped off at the rim of the vial,
the vial is sealed, and the donor initials the seal. The
entire process takes just 5 minutes.
7. How much does it cost?
Oral fluid can be significantly less than traditional urine
testing. The economic advantage of the Intercept® oral fluid
drug test is that it can reduce the cost of collections,
scheduling fees, and the time lost for employees to travel
to collection sites to provide their urine sample.
8. What is the turnaround time?
Most of our lab partners receive samples via overnight courier, tests them
the day they arrive and reports negative results by early
afternoon. Positive results are confirmed, reviewed and
reported within 72 hours of receipt.
9. Isn't oral fluid a hazardous fluid?
No. Because the testing methodology is not classified as
a "dental process," OSHA does not consider oral fluid collections
hazardous. In addition, oral fluid specimens are not subject
to the same handling and disposal issues that face other
body fluids.
10. How do you know if you have enough sample to test?
If the donor keeps the collection pad in his or her mouth
for at least two minutes, as indicated on the package, there
is enough to test. The collection pad is treated with salts
to stimulate oral fluid secretion, making the process very
reliable. In fact, based on experience from life insurance
testing, only 1 in 10,000 samples report as insufficient
for testing.
11. How do I get more information?
Contact our Client Service Department at 1-800-869-3538 for more detailed information. |