American Medical Association (AMA) Seeks to Test Older Physicians: The Aging Physician–Goodbye Dr. Welby!

imgres-3

The AMA is seeking to test older physicians.  This is no doubt due to the influence and lobbying of the “impaired physicians movement” and the “addiction medicine” specialists who brought us the “impaired” and “disruptive” physician constructs.    As do all groups of this ilk, they want to expand.  It is predictable and that is what we are seeing here.


Originally posted on Disrupted Physician:

The Aging Physician—Goodbye Dr. Welby!

IMG_8902

As a specialist in geriatric medicine I have experience in taking care of a number of  doctors who were referred to me for suspected memory problems. Still operating and teaching residents in his 70s, my first was a well-respected surgeon, a pioneer or Maverick who had made advances in his particular subspecialty.  Known for his detailed knowledge of the history of medicine and sharp clinical acumen, he had not seemed himself for a while.  His colleagues noted he appeared slower,  fatigued and forgetful at times (not remembering his keys, having trouble finding the right word).  An internist friend and co-worker who knew him for 50 years curb-sided me and asked if I would see him.  He did not have a primary care physician or even seen a doctor professionally for decades (a common phenomenon in this age cohort of doctors).

I met him the next week and he readily admitted to having difficulty concentrating and having trouble with his short term memory.  On taking his history he told me of his life and career which started as an intern in Boston in 1942 and he was on duty the night 492 people were killed in the  Cocoanut Grove fire with many of the victims transported to his hospital.  “I can see every detail as if it were yesterday–beautiful young women wearing fashionable dresses and gowns and young men in formal evening wear who looked as if they were sleeping but were dead.”

“Gastric reflux ” was the only medical problem he reported, adding it was well controlled for the better part of a decade with anti-reflux medications from the office sample closet.   I tested his memory with several cognitive scales which showed some mild deficits in short-term memory and sent him to a neuropsychologist for more comprehensive testing.  His physical examination, including a comprehensive neurological exam was normal.  I ordered the usual lab work up for dementia to look for possible metabolic causes and his B12 level returned markedly low–a result of his long-term use of proton pump inhibitors.  He was given an intramuscular injection and started on high doses of oral B12.  As one of the “reversible’ causes of dementia he was back to his usual sprightly self several months later.

Another, a 70 old psychiatrist still teaching medical students and residents had asked a third-year psychiatric resident out on a date on two separate occasions. She reported him to administration on the second request.  When I  asked him about the incident he replied he didn’t see what was wrong with what he did and it was being blown out of proportion.  “She’s in her 20’s” I said to which he replied “Well I’m only 36.” Still giving lectures to first year medical students without error or pause from knowledge he learned long ago, he could not identify a pencil or a watch when I pointed to them and asked what there were. He knew neither the month, season or year.  After an MRI and neuropsychological testing he was given a diagnosis of probable Alzheimers disease.   He had no spouse or children and his work was his life.  After that he became  profoundly depressed and six months later was dead.

Another  elderly doctor, an internist, had a fairly sudden sudden onset of memory problems and symptoms of delirium.  It turned out he was having trouble sleeping and his cardiologist prescribed him Dalmane, a benzodiazepine similar to  Valium (medications that have a whole host of adverse effects in older patients including memory problems and falls).  But valium has a half-life of hours whereas Dalmane has a half life of days.   The medication was stopped and he was back to normal after a few days.

Aging  is associated with an increased  decline  in many areas including  cognition, motor-skills, muscle strength, and vision that can individually or cumulatively create risk to the person or others in a variety of situations (driving, living situation, occupation).

With advancing age comes advancing risk and the recognition and vigilance of others is often necessary for intervention. If the risk is recognized the problem can be addressed by the appropriate healthcare providers and specialists.

Doctors are not immune from cognitive impairment or dementia and the perspicacity of others is necessary should this occur.

Recognition and awareness are important.  So too is an assessment by a qualified physician Board Certified in Neurology, Geriatrics or Geriatric Psychiatry who has education and experience in the diagnosis and treatment of memory disorders.

Slide15

Recognition, Insight and Education Essential

In 2009 Dr. Ralph Blasier, M.D, J.D., published an article in the Journal  Clinical Orthopaedics and Related Research entitled “The Problem of the Aging Surgeon: When Surgeon Age Becomes a Surgical Risk Factor” discussing the ability of older physicians to practice medicine safely and effectively.

His primary message is that a decline in physical and cognitive abilities is associated with the aging process and that these issues are especially pertinent to the field of medicine.

An area  little researched, Blasier gives anecdotal examples such as a surgeon in his late 80s who had to regularly depend on younger colleagues to finish his operations. He concludes that these anecdotal examples suggest many surgeons lack insight into the degradation of their own skills and suggests recognition, insight, and education can help facilitate retirement of the aging surgeon  before  a decline in competency and skill creates a problem.

The awareness, education and insight of others is necessary to identify age associated illness in doctors who can then be referred to the proper specialists for evaluation.  And although no evidence base exists, anecdotal reports such as these caused some groups to see an opportunity to increase the grand scale of the hunt.

IMG_8901

Aging Physicians Next Target of Physician Health Programs

As with the “impaired” and “disruptive” physician, the “physician health and wellness movement” organized as the Federation of State Physician Health Programs (FSPHP) is linking the “aging” physician with threats to patient safety and  hospital liability.  “Experts say doing nothing could result in lawsuits, higher liability insurance rates, ruined reputations for practices and all involved, and even possible losses of practices and the licenses of non-reporting physicians.”

And if you look at the articles and presentations aimed at  the administrative, regulatory, and legal arenas of medicine it appears a new moral panic is percolating in the “physician wellness” cauldron.

Labelling a group dangerous and creating fear in those responsible for that group is an effective means to sway policy and opinion.

With absolutely no evidence base these groups have acted as   “moral entrepreneurs ” and used this same methodology to successfully change policy and regulation in the medical profession and advance their goals.  The methodology is to

1. Label a group and link that group to danger

2. Offer to assist in identifying and eliminating that danger

3. Corner the market and control all aspects including assessment, testing and monitoring by swaying those in authority to make it public policy and regulation.  Screen Shot 2015-03-11 at 8.10.37 PM

The methodology is not new–witches are real, witches are dangerous and witches need to be identified and exterminated at all costs.  Convince the authorities to assist you in protecting the public from harm and advance  the greater good

In this manner the FSPHP has convinced state medical boards to adopt and enforce policies that have incrementally and systematically increased their autonomy, scope and power since they first cultivated a relationship with the Federation of State Medical Boards (FSMB).  This occurred in 1995 when they took an uninvited seat at the table of power by offering a non-disciplinary “safe harbor” as an alternative to discipline for doctors impaired by drugs or alcohol.

Since then they have increased their scope from  the “impaired” to the “disruptive” to everything else.  Arising from the “impaired physicians movement”  as “addiction specialists” these doctors whose specialty of addiction is not even recognized by the American Board of Medical Specialties have now become the “experts” in all matters related to physician health.  Jacks of all trades covering neurology, psychiatry, geriatrics, and occupational medicine.

A 2011 updated FSMB  Policy on Physician Impairment  states that Medical Boards should recognize the state Physician Heath Program (PHP) as their experts in all matters relating to licensed professionals with “potentially impairing illness,”   and these  include those potentially impairing maladies that increase as we age.

They are also using “everyone else does it why don’t we?” logical fallacy.  According to a Washington Post article “other professions are subject to age-related regulations. For example, airline pilots must undergo regular health screenings staring at age 40 and must retire at age 65. FBI agents must retire at age 57.”Screen Shot 2015-03-11 at 8.10.59 PM

Proposing drug testing in doctors a  JAMA article  uses this same logic stating when sentinel events occur in the airline, nuclear power and railway industry the get drug tested.  However all of these industries use FDA approved tests, certified labs, strict chain-of-custody and MRO review in their drug testing.  One of the authors of the JAMA paper, Dr. Greg Skipper, introduced the non-FDA approved and unvalidated Laboratory Developed Tests currently used in PHPs such as EtG.   He claims no conflicts-of-interest.   Comparing drug testing to industries that use the highest quality of testing and safeguards to protect the donor from false-positives to the junk science used in PHPs is comparing apples to oranges. Which one do you think they’s be using in the random drug testing of doctors?

Furthermore, airline pilots, railway engineers and nuclear power plant employees have a choice of assessment and treatment centers should they get a positive test.  Doctors do not.  They are mandated to “PHP-approved” facilities.  This is enforced by state medical boards as they adhere to an ASAM   Public Policy Statement  recommending only “PHP approved” treatment centers be used for assessment and treatment and a recent  audit  found the PHP in North Carolina could not provide any measurable indices  or qualitative indicators of how an assessment center is stamped “approved.” The best they could come up with is “reputation” and other ‘informal sources.  What the audit missed is all of the 19  out-of-state “PHP-approved” centers Medical Directors can be found on this list.

Screen Shot 2015-03-11 at 8.13.13 PM

And what will happen with the “aging physician” is the same.  Doctors will be forced into “assessments” at “PHP-approved” facilities where they will be misdiagnosed, over-diagnosed and forced into monitoring contracts under threat of loss of licensure. Goodbye Dr. Welby!

IMG_8900

Screen Shot 2015-06-18 at 2.17.48 AM

IMG_0933

IMG_0706

Physician Health Programs (PHPs) are not above the law: They have simply manufactured a “culture of impunity” by removing themselves from all aspects of accountability

brick_wall

Physician Health Programs are not Above the Law

Are Physician Health Programs (PHPs) above the law?  

 Unable to get law enforcement to take cognizance of reported abuse, many doctors I have spoken with believe that the actors involved are impervious to criminal liability.  Complaints of fabrication and fraud involving PHPs and their affiliates to the police, the Attorney General and other law enforcement agencies have been given no credence,  tabled or dismissed with little investigation.

Believing these agencies are deliberately ignoring credible complaints and the documentary evidence placed before them, some have concluded that state PHPs have been given the power to commit crimes with impunity and immunity.

PHPs are not above the law.  It is by removing themselves from and blocking the usual routes of accountability and absolute operational control of the testing, assessment and treatment process that has enabled misconduct to remain hidden, unrecognized or excused. The crimes exist but they remain undetected, unnoticed and unpunished.

Removing Accountability

The essence of accountability is answerability which means having the obligation to answer questions regarding decisions and actions.   This requires the transmission of information when it is requested.  The accountable actor provides the information to the overseeing actors in a transparent manner.

Accountability also requires explanation and justification for the information provided. What was done and why? Standards, rules, regulations, codes, laws and other benchmarks are then applied by the overseeing actor to determine if the information provided was appropriate or inappropriate.

The availability and application of sanctions for illegal or inappropriate actions uncovered through answerability is also a necessary component of accountability. This is necessary to impose restraint on authority and power.  Lack of enforcement of sanctions contribute to the creation of a culture of impunity.

The usual mechanisms that exist to impose restraint and create incentives for appropriate behavior and actions are absent. No outside oversight exists to limit their power or subject them to a set of rules.  No regulation exists to curb abuse.

A Culture of Impunity

The authority accorded PHPs and the power they exercise exist in a culture of impunity.

The key findings of the2014  North Carolina PHP Audit are below:.

Screen Shot 2015-06-14 at 2.15.41 AM

No indications of abuse were found,  a point brandished by the PHP as redeeming  and proving no abuse was occurring. In actual fact it is an ominous finding that also relates to their apparent ability to violate the law. 

The audit found no indications of abuse but that abuse could occur and not be detected because of an absence of due process for the complainant, excessive control of the complaint process by the PHP and absence of oversight by either the medical board or medical society.  What this means is that a doctor with no power is making a complaint against an unsupervised agency with enough power to influence the investigation of a complaint against itself.  The reason no indications of abuse were found is because the system is specifically designed to hide abuse.  That is the intent.

Absence of transparency, regulation and oversight coupled with control of information enables both censorship and doctoring of records.   Strict Confidentiality is enforced by HIPAA, peer review protection, and drug and alcohol confidentiality law.  

Quest Diagnostics

PHPs are able to suppress and conceal criminal activity but they are also able to  manufacture information designed to hide misconduct.  

The North Carolina Audit found no objective selection criteria for the out of state assessment and treatment centers because none exist other than ideological mindset and monetary gain.  The same facilities are used by most state PHPS.  They are, in fact, mandated as they are the “PHP-preferred” facilities.  

In 2011 The American Society of Addiction Medicine (ASAM) issued a public policy statement on coordination between PHPs, regulatory agencies, and treatment providers. recommending only “PHP-approved” treatment centers be used and the statement specifically excludes ‘non-PHP” recognized facilities.  

What the Audit diid not discover is the medical directors of all of the “PHP-approved” facilities can all be seen on this list of Like-Minded Docs.  It is a rigged game    Every aspect of drug-testing, assessment and treatment is kept hidden and secret and within control of the PHP.

It is a rigged game in which they have removed themselves from all aspects of accountability.  They have, in effect, manufactured a culture of impunity at our expense.

images-25

Report: Shortage of 90,000 Doctors by 2025

Originally posted on Hoosier Econ:

tireddoctor

In a report prepared for the Association of American Medical Colleges a grim outlook was given concerning physician supply in the United States. Here is what was found:

Demand for physicians continues to grow faster than supply, leading to a projected shortfall of between 46,100 and 90,400 physicians by 2025.  The report can be read here. Much of the shortage will be from stronger demand of people getting on Obamacare.

View original

Letters From Those Abused and Afraid

There is no evidential standard used and false accusations and even forged documents are routinely used against the targeted doctor. Physicians are ill prepared for such criminal tactics used against them, by the time they realize it is happening, it is too late to stop the inevitable process that threatens their medical license. This is very emotionally traumatic to doctors who have always excelled in their schooling, worked hard to get where they are, and are facing the loss of not only their professional careers but also financial security, their self esteem and self concept.

mllangan1's avatarDisrupted Physician

IMG_0873

Letters From Those Abused and Afraid.

Please sign Petition.

I get many e-mails, letters and phone calls from doctors, nurses and others who have been abused by  “professional health programs” (PHPs).  Most do not want their letters published for fear of being identified and punished by the PHP.   They are reluctant to do so even with their names and states removed as they feel their complaints alone could reveal their identity to they prying eyes of the PHP.   A few have allowed their letters to be posted and I am doing so here:    Letters From Those Abused and Afraid

I am posting Dr. Roop’s  letter below at his request.  He specifically stated his name and contact information be included. I applaud his courage.   As was the case with the Inquisition, this is system  that relies, above all else,  on secrecy and silence.

Effective “Impression management” requires both promoting positive information…

View original post 1,413 more words

“You have an Irish last name-good luck finding anyone who will believe you!” [ are not an alcoholic] -Linda Bresnahan, Director of Operations, PHS [after fabricating positive alcohol test]

image1Details of how the state physician health program (PHP) scams operates can be seen below as pertains to my case. Occurring in most states under the Federation of State Physician Health Programs (FSPHP), some are worse than others but the Method of Operation (M.O) remains. The template is the same.

mllangan1's avatarDisrupted Physician

image1

Integrity and Accountability—Going on two months and no winners stepping forward. Defend the MRO Procedurally, Ethically or Legally and you win all the prizes.

As the Medical Review Officer (MRO)  for the Massachusetts state Physician Health Program (PHP), Physician Health Services, Inc. (PHS, inc.), Dr. Wayne Gavryck’s responsibility is simple.  He is supposed to verify that the chain-of-custody  in any and all drug and alcohol testing is intact before reporting a test as positive.

Screen Shot 2014-12-03 at 12.53.49 AM

Dr. Gavryck evidently did not do that here.  In fact for more than a year he helped cover up an alcohol test that was intentionally fabricated at the behest of PHS Medical Director Dr. Luis Sanchez, M.D. and Director of Operations Linda Bresnahan (who told me when I confronted her with the fact that I have never had or ever even been suspected of having an alcohol problem “you have an Irish last name–good luck finding anyone…

View original post 998 more words

The Medical Profession under Dictatorship–Revisiting Dr. Leo Alexander’s prescient warnings from 1949

“Let it be considered, too, that the present inquiry is not concerning a matter of right, if I may say so, but concerning a matter of fact.”–Adam Smith

via The Medical Profession under Dictatorship–Revisiting Dr. Leo Alexander’s prescient warnings from 1949.

The “Impaired Physician Movement” takeover of state Physician Health Programs (PHPs).

images-1

“The impaired physician movement is characterized by a number of evangelical recovered alcoholic and addict physicians, whose recovery has been accompanied by an involvement in medical society and treatment programs. Their ability to make authoritative pronouncements on physician impairment is based on their own claim to insider’s knowledge.”–G.V. Stimson  (1)

Forget what you see; Some things they just change invisibly–Elliott Smith (Between the Bars)

IMG_8923

Physician Impairment

The Sick Physician: Impairment by Psychiatric Disorders, Including Alcoholism and Drug Dependence, published by the American Medical Association’s (AMA) Council on Mental Health in The Journal of the American Medical Association in 1973, (2)  recommended that physicians do a better job of helping colleagues impaired by mental illness, alcoholism or drug dependence. The AMA defined an “impaired physician” as “a physician who is unable to practice medicine with reasonable skill and safety to patients because of mental illness or excessive use or abuse of drugs, including alcohol.”

Recognition of physician impairment in the 1970s by both the medical community and the general public led to the development of “impaired physician” programs with the purpose of both helping impaired doctors and protecting the public from them.

IMG_1010The 1975 media coverage of the deaths of Drs. Stewart and Cyril Marcus brought the problem of impaired physicians into the public eye. IMG_0940Leading experts in the field of Infertility Medicine, the twin gynecologists were found dead in their Upper East Side apartment from drug withdrawal that New York Hospital was aware of but did nothing about. Performing surgery with trembling hands and barely able to stand, an investigation revealed that nothing had been done to help the Marcus brothers with their addiction or protect patients. They were 45 –years old.

Top: Twin Gynecologists Stewart and Cyril Marcus Bottom: The Movie

Top: Twin Gynecologists Stewart and Cyril Marcus
Bottom: The Movie “Dead Ringers” starring Jeremy Irons based on the Marcus twins

Although the New York State Medical Society had set up its own voluntary program for impaired physicians three years earlier, the Marcus case prompted the state legislature to pass a law that doctors had to report any colleague suspected of misconduct to the state medical board and those who didn’t would face misconduct charges themselves.


Physician Health Programs

Physician health programs (PHPs)  existed in almost every state by 1980. Often staffed by volunteer physicians and funded by State Medical Societies, these programs served the dual purpose of helping sick colleagues and protecting the public. Preferring rehabilitation to probation or license revocation so long as the public was protected from imminent danger, most medical boards accepted the concept with support and referral.

As an alternative to discipline the introduction of PHPs created a perception of medical boards as “enforcers” whose job was to sanction and discipline whereas PHPs were perceived as “rehabilitators” whose job was to help sick physicians recover. One of many false dichotomies this group uses and it is perhaps this perceived benevolence that created an absence of the need to guard.


Employee Assistance Programs for Doctors

Physician Health Programs (PHPs) are the equivalent of Employee Assistance Programs (EAPs) for other occupations. PHPs meet with, assess, and monitor doctors who have been referred to them for substance use or other mental or behavioral health problems.

Most EAPs, however, were developed with the collaboration of workers unions or some other group supporting the rights and best interests of the employees. PHPs were created and evolved without any oversight or regulation.

Screen Shot 2014-02-24 at 10.32.36 PM

The American Society of Addiction Medicine can trace its roots to the 1954 founding of theNew York City Medical Society on Alcoholism (NYCMSA) by Ruth Fox, M.D whose husband died from alcoholism.

The society, numbering about 100 members, established itself as a national organization in1967, the American Medical Society on Alcoholism (AMSA).

By 1970 membership was nearly 500.

In 1973 AMSA became a component of the National Council on Alcoholism (NCA) in a medical advisory capacity until 1983.

But by the mid 1980’s ASAM’s membership became so large that they no longer needed to remain under the NCADD umbrella.

In 1985 ASAM’s first certification exam was announced. According to Dr. Bean-Bayog, chair of the Credentialing Committee, “a lot of people in the alcoholism field have long wanted physicians in the field to have a high level of skills and scientific credibility and for this body of knowledge to be accredited” (3).   And in 1986 662 physicians took the first ASAM Certification Exam.

Slide16

By 1988 membership was over 2,800 with 1,275 of these physicians “certified” as “having demonstrated knowledge and expertise in alcoholism and other drug dependencies commensurate with the standards set forth by the society.” (4)  The formation of State Chapters began with California, Florida, Georgia, and Maryland submitting requests.(5)

Screen Shot 2014-03-31 at 10.09.31 AM

In 1988 the AMA House of Delegates voted to admit ASAM to the House. According to ASAM News this “legitimizes the society within the halls of organized medicine. (3)
IMG_8919

By 1993 ASAM had a membership of 3,500 with a total of 2,619 certifications in Addiction Medicine. The Membership Campaign Task Force sets a goal to double its membership of 3,500 to 7,000 by the year 2000 to assure “the future of treatment for patients with chemicals. It represents a blueprint for establishing addiction medicine as a viable entity.” (6)

Screen Shot 2014-11-09 at 11.30.55 PM

Many of these physicians joined state PHPs and over time have taken over under the umbrella of the FSPHP.

Others became medical directors of treatment centers such as Hazelden, Marworth and Talbott.


1. Stimson GV. Recent developments in professional control: the impaired physician movement in the USA. Sociology of health & illness. Jul 1985;7(2):141-166.

2. The sick physician. Impairment by psychiatric disorders, including alcoholism and drug dependence. JAMA : the journal of the American Medical Association. Feb 5 1973;223(6):684-687.

3. Four Decades of ASAM. ASAM News. March-April 1994, 1994.

4. American Medical Society on Alcoholism & Other Drug Dependencies Newsletter. Vol III. New York, NY: AMSAODD; 1988:12.

5. AMSAODD News. Vol III. New York, NY: American Medical Society on Alcoholism & Other Drug Dependencies; 1988.

6. Membership Campaign Update. ASAM News. Vol VIII: American Society of Addiction Medicine; 1993:11.

Class Action Suit Filed Against Michigan PHP Alleging Constitutional Violations Related to Involuntary Treatment—Looking for Attorneys Familiar with (or Willing to Learn About) PHP Issues to File Similar Suits Including here in Massachusetts

Screen Shot 2015-01-09 at 1.59.40 AMSurvey indicating same patterns across the country–Looking for attorneys familiar with (or more importantly willing to learn about) professional health program legal issues who can file similar suits including Here in Massachusetts.

The issues are the same and include:

1. False assessments and diagnoses.
2. Forensic fraud and falsified drug and alcohol tests.
3. Collusion with third party commercial labs to commit fraud.
4. Establishment clause violations.
5. HIPAA Violations.
6. Anti-trust violations.
7. Ultra vires acts as non-profit agencies including the unlawful practice of medicine.

Please click on the links above to see detailed examples and discussions of these issues.  It is an open area as my survey has revealed an additional factor stacking the deck and removing accountability from PHPs.

The attorneys ostensibly representing doctors are also part of the racket.

A doctor referred to a PHP will be given a list of 3 or 4 attorneys by the PHP who are “experienced in working with the medical board.” What they do not tell you is that theses attorneys are hand-picked or cultivated to abide by the rules dictated by the PHP.

They will not “bite the hand that feeds” and any procedural, ethical or criminal misconduct by the PHP will not be addressed.

See “Competent, Ethical and Fair Legal Representation for Doctors–A Possible New Niche Area for Lawyers.”

My survey also indicates some states are worse than others and North Carolina, Washington, Florida and Massachusetts are over-represented as far as misconduct and ethical violations.

mllangan1's avatarDisrupted Physician

Screen Shot 2015-01-09 at 1.59.40 AMA Federal class action lawsuit has been filed in the Eastern District of Michigan against the state PHP program alleging constitutional violations related to the forced medical treatment of health care professionals involved in the State’s  “Professionals Health Program” (PHP)  and the “callous and reckless termination of professional licenses without due process.”  According to the complaint:

“The Health Professional Recovery Program (HPRP) was established by the Michigan Legislature as a confidential, non-disciplinary approach to support recovery from substance use or mental health disorders. The program was designed to encourage impaired health professionals to seek a recovery program before their impairment harms a patient or damages their careers through disciplinary action. Unfortunately, a once well-meaning program, HPRP, has turned into a highly punitive and involuntary program where health professionals are forced into extensive and unnecessary substance abuse/dependence treatment under the threat of the arbitrary application of pre-hearing deprivations (Summary Suspension) by LARA.filed…

View original post 1,346 more words

Against the Rising Tide: Looking for Biostatisticians and Epidemiologists to help shape Drug-Testing Policy to be more Evidence-Based

I can’t pay you but you would be combating injustice, corruption and dishonesty. You would be doing your part in helping the Medical Profession, honest and decent doctors, our country and perhaps our future.

mllangan1's avatarDisrupted Physician

Wanted!–a Few Honest Statisticians, Biostatisticans and Epidemiologists who want to make a difference..

Screen Shot 2014-12-30 at 8.45.09 PM

It is only a few public policy steps and minor changes in state regulatory statutes before what is described in the ASAM White Paper on Drug Testing comes to fruition.  Before we know it the Drug and Alcohol Testing Industries “New Paradigm” as described here by Robert Dupont will be ushered in.  From the ASAM white Paper:

“THIS WHITE PAPER ENCOURAGES WIDER AND “SMARTER” USE OF DRUG TESTING WITHIN THE PRACTICE OF MEDICINE AND, BEYOND THAT,BROADLY WITHIN AMERICAN SOCIETY. SMARTER DRUG TESTING MEANS INCREASED USE OF RANDOM TESTING* RATHER THAN THE MORE COMMON SCHEDULED TESTING,* AND IT MEANS TESTING NOT ONLY URINE BUT ALSO OTHER MATRICES SUCH AS BLOOD, ORAL FLUID (SALIVA), HAIR, NAILS, SWEAT AND BREATH WHEN THOSE MATRICES MATCH THE INTENDED ASSESSMENT PROCESS. IN ADDITION, SMARTER TESTING MEANS TESTING BASED UPON CLINICAL INDICATION…

View original post 423 more words