Pubdate: Mon, 31 Oct 2011 Source: Columbia Daily Tribune (MO) Copyright: 2011 Columbia Daily Tribune Contact: http://www.columbiatribune.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/91 Note: Prints the street address of LTE writers. Author: Janese Silvey Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/testing.htm (Drug Testing) DRUG-TESTING DEBATE SHIFTS TO MU Attorney Argues With New Policy. Students enrolling in medical programs at the University of Missouri this fall were required to take drug tests - a new mandate one local attorney says is unconstitutional. To make his point, attorney Dan Viets cites Linn State Technical College's attempt to screen its students this year. A U.S. district judge last week issued a preliminary injunction blocking those tests and warned the public college that she doesn't think the requirement passes constitutional muster. Viets, a Columbia attorney, filed a statement in the case on behalf of Students for Sensible Drug Policies. He is now looking for a plaintiff to challenge MU's new policy. The MU School of Medicine and School of Nursing implemented the 14-panel urine drug tests this year, requiring students to take the tests during a weeklong orientation before school started, said Alison Martin, director of admissions for the School of Medicine. Because medical students work in clinical settings, the goal was to align policies with MU Health Care's, she said. MU hospital and clinic workers, including physicians and administrators, have been required to take pre-employment drug tests since 2004, spokeswoman Mary Jenkins said. Asked about the Linn State legal challenge, Martin said, "It feels like apples and oranges. ... We certainly value our relationship with the hospitals and clinics and want to do what we can to ensure the health and safety of patients." Linn State officials also cited safety as a factor in their decision to begin drug-testing. The college offers programs that involve hands-on work such as engine repair and aircraft maintenance. Viets argues that drug-testing does nothing to ensure safety. Unlike breath tests that capture whether an individual is intoxicated at a point in time, drug tests don't accurately reflect a person's current condition, he said. "It makes no more sense than to test someone to see whether you drank a beer a month ago," Viets said. "Certainly folks who run the medical school ought to understand that drug tests have nothing to do with the ability to work safely and productively. It's a sham, a PR gimmick." Viets also questions whether MU Health's employee drug tests are legal, considering the entity is a public institution. Courts have historically ruled that public employees should not be drug-tested unless there's a special need. "I confess there might be a chance of a court upholding drug-testing of doctors," he said. "But I don't think a court would hold that there's a special need to drug-test janitors" at a public hospital. - --- MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom