Pubdate: Wed, 21 Feb 2007 Source: Times, The (Trenton, NJ) Copyright: 2007 The Times Contact: http://www.nj.com/times/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/458 Author: Ken Wolski HAMILTON DRUG TESTS UNDERMINE NURSE-PATIENT TRUST I read with interest the story about the student drug testing in "Drug test angers family" (Feb. 9). My concern was the nurse's involvement in this school administrator-ordered test. I was involved with some of the first urine drug testing among in mates in the New Jersey Department of Corrections (NJDOC) when I worked as a nurse in a juvenile facility in the mid-1980s. At that time, nurses were required to collect the urine, sign as witness to the collection, label the containers, complete the "chain-of-evidence" form, store the containers in a locked refrigerator, and send them off for analysis. We nurses protested that these were inappropriate actions since: a) These were not medical tests that were being done for the health of the inmate/patient; they were evidence-collection tests that resulted in some disciplinary sanction for a positive result, and b) Requiring nurses to carry out non-nursing, disciplinary tests on inmates was a corruption of the nurse-patient relationship. The nurse-patient relationship is a precious and fragile thing that is based on the trust that all of the nurses' actions are therapeutic, i.e., for the health and well-being of the patient, and not part of some disciplinary program. This is true whether the disciplinary program is removal from extracurricular activities, up to and including capital punishment. After a short time, the nurses' arguments prevailed and the NJDOC stopped requiring nurses to be involved in the urine drug screening of inmates. No nurse has been involved in the collection of urine for drug screens in the juvenile or adult sections of the NJDOC for more than 10 years. Custody officers perform this function. Obviously, it is just as important for students as it is for inmates to be treated in a way that is respectful of the nurse-patient relationship. Moreover, drug testing typically requires the inappropriate release of confidential medical information to administrators, usually by nurses, as some prescribed drugs may produce false positive results in urine drug screening. KEN WOLSKI, RN, MPA