Pubdate: Sat, 22 Mar 2008 Source: Wyoming Tribune-Eagle (WY) Copyright: 2008 The Wyoming Tribune-Eagle Contact: http://www.wyomingnews.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1217 Author: Michael Van Cassell Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/testing.htm (Drug Test) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/meth.htm (Methamphetamine) METH USE AT WORK DOWN CHEYENNE -- Statistics from the nation's largest drug-testing company showed fewer Wyoming workers had methamphetamine in their systems in 2007 than in the two years previous, according to a study released by the White House. In 2005, 1 percent of Wyoming workers tested positive for methamphetamine, while last year 0.28 percent of those tested had the drug in their system, according to the study. It marked a 72 percent decrease in workers who tested positive for methamphetamine. Nationally, workplace methamphetamine use decreased 44 percent from 2005 to 2007, according to the study. The statistics were compiled with information from the Quest Diagnostics Drug Testing Index -- the largest drug-testing company in the nation, said Jennifer de Vallance, press secretary for the Office of National Drug Control Policy. Laramie County Sheriff's Department spokesman Gerry Luce said there seems to be a general decline in the regional use of methamphetamine, but not with those being arrested in the county. "What we've seen is actually a slight increase of people coming into the jail," Luce said of methamphetamine use. Luce said methamphetamine makes those who use it more prone to violence and conflicts with staff members. Methamphetamine also complicates medical care for inmates who use, Luce said. "We have to pay more attention to those individuals," Luce said. According to Quest Diagnostics, methamphetamine use continues to be more prevalent in Wyoming than in most states across the country, according to the company's results. In 2002, the state and national averages of those testing positive for methamphetamine in the workplace was the same at 0.32 percent, according to the company's results. Since then, Wyoming's workplace methamphetamine average has remained higher than the national average every year, according to Quest Diagnostics. In 2005, when methamphetamine in the Wyoming workplace spiked to one in every 100 testing positive, it was more than five times the national average of 0.18 percent, according to the results. Last year, the average in Wyoming was 180 percent higher than the national average, according to the study. Dr. Mindy Dahl, a research scientist with the Wyoming Department of Health's Mental Health and Substance Abuse Services Division, said it is difficult to generalize workforce methamphetamine use across the state based on the drug-testing results from one company. "At this point, workforce drug testing information is not held in a single statewide repository and thus is difficult to access," Dahl said. Access to such information, which is held by multiple drug-testing companies, can be limited because of privacy issues, she said. State agencies are beginning to discuss how to share information and statistics on workforce drug testing in Wyoming, Dahl said. - --- MAP posted-by: Derek