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Sec.
40.139 On what basis
does the MRO verify test results involving opiates?
As the MRO, you must proceed as follows when you receive a
laboratory confirmed positive opiate result:
(a) If the laboratory
detects the presence of 6-acetylmorphine (6-AM) in the specimen, you
must verify the test result positive.
(b) In the absence of
6-AM, if the laboratory detects the presence of either morphine or
codeine at 15,000 ng/mL or above, you must verify the test result
positive unless the employee presents a legitimate medical explanation
for the presence of the drug or drug metabolite in his
or her system, as in the case of other drugs (see Sec.
40.137). Consumption
of food products (e.g., poppy seeds) must not be considered a legitimate
medical explanation for the employee having morphine or codeine at these
concentrations.
(c) For all other opiate
positive results, you must verify a confirmed positive test result for
opiates only if you determine that there is clinical evidence, in
addition to the urine test, of unauthorized use of any opium, opiate, or
opium derivative (i.e.,morphine, heroin, or codeine).
(1) As an MRO, it is
your responsibility to use your best professional and ethical judgement
and discretion to determine whether there is clinical evidence of
unauthorized use of opiates. Examples of information that you may
consider in making this judgement include, but are
not limited to, the following:
(i) Recent needle
tracks; [[Page
627]]
(ii) Behavioral and psychological signs of acute opiate
intoxication or withdrawal;
(iii) Clinical history
of unauthorized use recent enough to have produced the laboratory test
result;
(iv) Use of a medication
from a foreign country. See Sec. 40.137(e)for
guidance on how to make this determination.
(2) In order to
establish the clinical evidence referenced in paragraphs (c)(1)(i) and
(ii) of this section, personal observation of the employee is essential.
(i) Therefore, you, as
the MRO, must conduct, or cause another physician to conduct, a
face-to-face examination of the employee.
(ii) No face-to-face
examination is needed in establishing the clinical evidence referenced
in paragraph (c)(1)(iii) or (iv) of this section.
(3) To be the basis of a
verified positive result for opiates, the clinical evidence you find
must concern a drug that the laboratory found in the specimen. (For
example, if the test confirmed the presence of codeine, and the employee
admits to unauthorized use of hydrocodone, you do not have grounds for
verifying the test positive. The admission must be for the substance
that was found).
(4) As the MRO, you have
the burden of establishing that there is clinical evidence of
unauthorized use of opiates referenced in this paragraph (c). If you
cannot make this determination (e.g., there is not sufficient clinical
evidence or history), you must verify the test as negative. The employee
does not need to show you that a legitimate medical explanation exists
if no clinical evidence is established. |