Pubdate: Wed, 07 Nov 2001 Source: Knoxville News-Sentinel (TN) Copyright: 2001 The Knoxville News-Sentinel Co. Contact: http://www.knoxnews.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/226 Author: Bill Poovey (AP), J J Stambaugh Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/testing.htm (Drug Testing) BEDFORD COUNTY GIVES PARENTS FREE HOME DRUG-TEST KITS SHELBYVILLE, Tenn. - Using government-provided kits, some Tennesseans are testing their children at home for illegal drugs, but a counselor said confronting a child with a cup is not always the best approach. In Bedford County, juvenile court officials and the sheriff are providing the urine test kits at no cost. They are designed to instantly let a parent know if their child is using or has used marijuana, cocaine, stimulants, depressants or opiates. Sheriff Clay Parker said the home-testing kits, which are limited to one per family, have been available for about a month, and a few have been given out so far. The kits are also sold by some pharmacies, typically costing more than $10 each. In Knox County, authorities don't provide home-testing kits to parents under any circumstances, said Assistant Juvenile Court Director Darrell Smith. "We do drug-test any child who is on probation with the court," Smith said. "But we do it through a private company ... It's just a standard part of their probation." If a parent suspects their child is using drugs - and the child is under any kind of probation or court-ordered supervision - officials are generally willing to perform a drug test upon request, he continued. "We would work with the parent, but we won't send it (a drug-testing kit) home," Smith said. Judy Freudenthal, clinical director of the Oasis, a social service program in Nashville for teenagers and their families, said parents should use caution before demanding a urine sample to test for illegal drugs. Freudenthal, who is also a counselor, said "every situation is different. What works between one circumstance and set of parents may not work so well with the next, or with another family." According to Hamblen County Juvenile Court Referee Janice Snider, parents in Morristown who wish to drug test their children can purchase a take-home kit from the court. "Our drug tests cost $15.75, and we're willing to supply those to parents if they cover the costs," Snider explained. "We haven't had a lot of requests." Snider said the court's budget is simply too small to provide free kits to parents on demand. - --- MAP posted-by: Beth