Pubdate: Sun, 13 May 2007
Source: Denver Post (CO)
Copyright: 2007 The Denver Post Corp
Contact:  http://www.denverpost.com/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/122
Author: Jenny Deam
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/testing.htm (Drug Test)
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/youth.htm (Youth)

DRUG-TEST KITS A BIG HIT WITH PARENTS

Addiction experts say home tests have a big drawback: They destroy
child-parent trust.

The Boulder mother had been down this road with one child and swore
she would never make a return trip. When she became suspicious her
younger son was trying drugs, she went to Walgreens, plunked down $38
for a home drug-test kit and told him to pee in a cup.

The high school junior was furious. And busted.

"Don't you trust me?" he wailed.

His mother would not budge.

Finally, reluctantly, the 16-year-old, whose name is not being used to
protect his privacy, confessed: The reason he didn't want to take the
test was that it would be positive.

His mother thanked him for his honesty and gave him 30 days to clean
up his act. There would be another test when he least expected. A
month later, she sent him back to the bathroom, cup in hand. He passed.

In the year since, she hasn't tested him again. But that doesn't mean
she won't. She keeps a test in the house, just in case.

What makes this mother's private act of parental vigilance so
extraordinary is not that she and tens of thousands of other parents
have bought into the multimillion-dollar industry of home drug testing.

It's that parents do so despite warnings from most major drug-abuse
and treatment professionals, the nation's medical establishment,
parenting experts and even the White House. All call home-testing
teens a bad idea.

"I guess home testing is better than no testing," said a skeptical
Bertha Madras, the White House's deputy drug czar.

But her Office of National Drug Control Policy does not encourage
parents to take matters into their own hands. Instead, the Bush
administration backs random school drug testing, arguing schools are
better equipped to help with counseling and referrals if a problem is
found.

"By the time a parent tests, it's already far down the road," Madras
said. "If they get a positive result, then what? Parents may or may
not have the skill to proceed."

Test accuracy a concern

In March, the American Academy of Pediatrics issued a policy statement
opposing both home drug testing and involuntary drug testing in
schools. The medical group prefers worried parents have their children
tested by qualified doctors or treatment specialists because of the
possibility of error or tampering.

"It's deceptively simple, but the truth is, it's actually a very
complicated issue," said Dr. Sharon Levy, who specializes in childhood
addiction at Children's Hospital Boston.

Levy has studied the meteoric rise of home drug testing since the
federal Food and Drug Administration first approved the kits in 1997.
She worries not only about inaccuracy but also about eroding trust
during a time when many teens are already pulling away.

Most tests use a litmus strip to detect traces of drugs or byproducts
in urine. Others check hair samples or saliva. As many as 12 illicit
and prescription drugs can be detected.

Still, experts worry the home tests are not sophisticated enough to
catch low levels or every drug being used.

"Parents are motivated by the best of intentions," Levy said. "They
are told by marketers this is a good thing to do. But drug testing is
basically a threat. And while it might have some short-term behavioral
changes, I don't think it's a good long-term prevention method."

Abuse by teens of prescription drugs, such as Vicodin and OxyContin,
remains a problem. However, the most recent survey of 50,000 eighth-,
10th-, and 12th-graders by Monitoring the Future shows the use of
illicit drugs, such as marijuana, actually is decreasing. Monitoring
the Future, a study by University of Michigan researchers funded by
the National Institutes of Health, has tracked drug use among
adolescents since 1975.

A "surveillance society"

Still, the drug-testing business has never been better.

Last year, sales by industry leader Phamatech Inc. topped $27 million,
said Carl Mongiovi, vice president of the San Diego company. He said
sales included more than 431,000 marijuana tests alone.

Since Phamatech introduced the first home tests in 1999, sales have
increased by more than 30 percent each year.

In Colorado Springs, single mother Amanda Beihl was one of the first
to carve out a business from Internet sales. Beihl created
homedrugtestingkit.com and last year sold more than 100,000 kits to
test for illicit and prescription drugs and alcohol use. She said her
sales are proof of a pendulum swing toward stricter parenting.

"The first time you dip that stick in the cup, you feel empowered,"
explained Kim Hildreth, a mom in suburban Dallas. "As a parenting
tool, this is as good as a report card."

Hildreth, too, sells kits from her home, often in bulk. She said her
business, drugtestyourteen.com, has grown 100 percent each year for
the past four years.

"It's a regular, accepted deal in our house," she said of random
testing.

Hildreth's youngest daughter, Delaney, started using drugs at age 12
and struggled for several years to get clean. Now Hildreth uses the
tests as a bargaining tool.

Delaney, now 18, recently got a puppy as a reward.

"It took a lot of negative drug tests to get him," the teenager
said.

Knowing your parents are waiting at home with a drug test makes it
easier to resist temptation, she said.

Still, not all parents resort to such measures to keep their kids
drug-free.

Dave Meggitt, a Denver father of two teens, cannot envision a time
when he would ever drug-test his kids.

"I think it's important to trust your kids. If you put them under a
microscope, you are asking for trouble," he said.

"I talk to my kids about drugs all the time. We have good
communication. I think I would know if they were having a problem,"
the car dealer and mechanic said.

He also uses a Scared Straight method. He took his son on a bus ride
down Colfax Avenue late one Saturday night.

"This could be your life," he told him as they watched drunks stagger
to their seats and observed drug deals.

Robert McCrie, a professor at John Jay College of Criminal Justice in
New York, sees home drug tests as a piece of a bigger parenting shift
in this country.

Ours is increasingly a "surveillance society," and parents are no
exception as they log onto parental portals to check school grades or
buy tracking devices for their children's cellphones, McCrie said.

The Boulder mother who drug-tested her son sees nothing wrong with
such vigilance. She and her husband took a more relaxed attitude with
their older son. Today he continues to struggle with addiction. She
takes no chances with her younger son.

And she could not care less what the experts say.

"You put your child in a car seat or a seat belt even though the odds
are against getting in a car accident. Why would you ever take that
chance of letting your child get further involved with drugs?" she
asked.

"The experts aren't living with my child, in my house. They aren't
putting their arms around them to protect them."

That's her job.
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MAP posted-by: Derek