Skip to main content
  • Foundation
  • Executive network
  • CEO Circle
  • Enterprise Solutions
  • Linkage Logo
  • Store
  • Sign In
  • Account
    • My Account
    • Logout
    • Global
    • India
    • MENA
SHRM
About
Book a Speaker
Join Today
Renew
Rejoin Now
Renew
  • Membership
  • Certification
    Certification

    Smiling asian student studying in library with laptop books doing online research for coursework, making notes for essay homework assignment, online education e-learning concept
    Get Certified!

    Be recognized as an HR leader with your SHRM-CP or SHRM-SCP credential.

    • How to Get Certified

      Demonstrate your ability to apply HR principles to real-life situations. No other HR certification compares.

      • How to Get Certified
      • Eligibility Criteria
      • Exam Details and Fees
      • SHRM-CP
      • SHRM-SCP
      • Which Certification is Best for Me
      • Certification FAQs
    • Prepare for the Exam

      Give yourself the best chance to pass your SHRM certification exam.

      • Exam Preparation
      • SHRM BASK
      • SHRM Learning System
      • Instructor-Led Learning
      • Self-Study
      • Study Aids & Add-ons
    • Recertification

      Recertify your SHRM Credentials before your end date!

      • Specialty Credentials
      • Qualifications
  • Topics & Tools
    Topics & Tools

    Stay up to date with workplace news and leverage our vast library of resources to streamline day-to-day HR tasks.

    The white house in washington, dc.
    Executive Order Impact Zone

    Do not abandon, but evaluate and evolve. It is about legal, equal opportunity for all.

    • News & Trends

      Follow breaking news and emerging workplace trends.

      Legal & Compliance

      Stay informed on workplace legal updates and their impacts.

      From the Workplace

      Explore diverse perspectives from your peers on today's workplaces.

      Flagships

      Get curated collections of podcasts, videos, articles, and more produced by SHRM.

    • HR Topics
      • AI in the Workplace
      • Civility at Work
      • Compensation & Benefits
      • Inclusion & Diversity
      • Talent Acquisition
      • Workplace Technology
      • Workplace Violence Prevention
      SEE ALL
      SHRM Research
    • Tools & Samples

      Access member resources and tools to streamline HR tasks.

      • Forms & Checklists
      • How-To Guides
      • Interactive Tools
      • Job Descriptions
      • Policies
      • Toolkits
      SEE ALL
      Ask an Advisor
  • Events & Education
    Events & Education

    SHRM25 in San Diego, June 29 - July 2, 2025
    Join us for SHRM25 in San Diego

    Register for the World’s Largest HR Conference being held on June 29 - July 2, 2025

    • Events
      • SHRM25
      • The AI+HI Project 2025
      • INCLUSION 2025
      • Talent 2026
      • Linkage Institute 2025
      SEE ALL
      Webinars
    • Educational Programs

      Designed and delivered by HR experts to empower you with the knowledge and tools you need to drive lasting change in the workplace.

      Specialty Credentials

      Demonstrate targeted competence and enhance credibility among peers and employers.

      Qualifications

      Gain a deeper understanding and develop critical skills.

    • Team Training & Development

      Customized training programs unique to your organization’s needs.

  • Business Solutions
  • Advocacy
    Advocacy

    Make your voice heard on public policy issues impacting the workplace.

    Advocacy
    SHRM's President & CEO testifies to Congress on "The State of American Education"
    • Policy Areas
      • Workforce Development
      • Workplace Inclusion
      • Workplace Flexibility & Leave
      • Workplace Governance
      • Workplace Health Care
      • Workplace Immigration
      State Affairs

      SHRM advances policy solutions in state legislatures nationwide.

      Global Policy

      SHRM is the go-to for global HR leaders and businesses on workplace matters.

    • Advocacy Team (A-Team)

      SHRM’s A-Team is a key member benefit, giving you the tools, insights, and opportunities to shape workplace policy and drive real impact.

      Take Action

      Urge lawmakers to support policies that create lasting, positive change.

      Advocacy & Legislative Resources

      Access SHRM’s curated policy materials and content.

    • SHRM-Led Coalitions
      • Generation Cares
      • The Section 127 Coalition
      • Learn More & Partner with SHRM Government Affairs
  • Community
    Community

    Woman raising hand in group
    Find a SHRM Chapter

    Easily find a local professional or student chapter in your area.

    • Chapters

      Find local connections from over 607 chapters and state councils and create your personalized HR network.

      SHRM Connect

      Post polls, get crowdsourced answers to your questions and network with other HR professionals online.

      SHRM Northern California

      Join SHRM members in the greater San Francisco Bay area for local events and networking.

    • Membership Councils

      Learn about SHRM's five regional councils and the Membership Advisory Council (MAC).

      • Membership Advisory Council
      • Regional Councils
    • Volunteers

      Learn about volunteer opportunities with SHRM.

      • Volunteer Leader Resource Center
Close
  • Membership
  • Certification
    back
    Certification
    Smiling asian student studying in library with laptop books doing online research for coursework, making notes for essay homework assignment, online education e-learning concept
    Get Certified!

    Be recognized as an HR leader with your SHRM-CP or SHRM-SCP credential.

    • How to Get Certified

      Demonstrate your ability to apply HR principles to real-life situations. No other HR certification compares.

      • How to Get Certified
      • Eligibility Criteria
      • Exam Details and Fees
      • SHRM-CP
      • SHRM-SCP
      • Which Certification is Best for Me
      • Certification FAQs
    • Prepare for the Exam

      Give yourself the best chance to pass your SHRM certification exam.

      • Exam Preparation
      • SHRM BASK
      • SHRM Learning System
      • Instructor-Led Learning
      • Self-Study
      • Study Aids & Add-ons
    • Recertification

      Recertify your SHRM Credentials before your end date!

      • Specialty Credentials
      • Qualifications
  • Topics & Tools
    back
    Topics & Tools

    Stay up to date with workplace news and leverage our vast library of resources to streamline day-to-day HR tasks.

    The white house in washington, dc.
    Executive Order Impact Zone

    Do not abandon, but evaluate and evolve. It is about legal, equal opportunity for all.

    • News & Trends

      Follow breaking news and emerging workplace trends.

      Legal & Compliance

      Stay informed on workplace legal updates and their impacts.

      From the Workplace

      Explore diverse perspectives from your peers on today's workplaces.

      Flagships

      Get curated collections of podcasts, videos, articles, and more produced by SHRM.

    • HR Topics
      • AI in the Workplace
      • Civility at Work
      • Compensation & Benefits
      • Inclusion & Diversity
      • Talent Acquisition
      • Workplace Technology
      • Workplace Violence Prevention
      SEE ALL
      SHRM Research
    • Tools & Samples

      Access member resources and tools to streamline HR tasks.

      • Forms & Checklists
      • How-To Guides
      • Interactive Tools
      • Job Descriptions
      • Policies
      • Toolkits
      SEE ALL
      Ask an Advisor
  • Events & Education
    back
    Events & Education
    SHRM25 in San Diego, June 29 - July 2, 2025
    Join us for SHRM25 in San Diego

    Register for the World’s Largest HR Conference being held on June 29 - July 2, 2025

    • Events
      • SHRM25
      • The AI+HI Project 2025
      • INCLUSION 2025
      • Talent 2026
      • Linkage Institute 2025
      SEE ALL
      Webinars
    • Educational Programs

      Designed and delivered by HR experts to empower you with the knowledge and tools you need to drive lasting change in the workplace.

      Specialty Credentials

      Demonstrate targeted competence and enhance credibility among peers and employers.

      Qualifications

      Gain a deeper understanding and develop critical skills.

    • Team Training & Development

      Customized training programs unique to your organization’s needs.

  • Business Solutions
  • Advocacy
    back
    Advocacy

    Make your voice heard on public policy issues impacting the workplace.

    Advocacy
    SHRM's President & CEO testifies to Congress on "The State of American Education"
    • Policy Areas
      • Workforce Development
      • Workplace Inclusion
      • Workplace Flexibility & Leave
      • Workplace Governance
      • Workplace Health Care
      • Workplace Immigration
      State Affairs

      SHRM advances policy solutions in state legislatures nationwide.

      Global Policy

      SHRM is the go-to for global HR leaders and businesses on workplace matters.

    • Advocacy Team (A-Team)

      SHRM’s A-Team is a key member benefit, giving you the tools, insights, and opportunities to shape workplace policy and drive real impact.

      Take Action

      Urge lawmakers to support policies that create lasting, positive change.

      Advocacy & Legislative Resources

      Access SHRM’s curated policy materials and content.

    • SHRM-Led Coalitions
      • Generation Cares
      • The Section 127 Coalition
      • Learn More & Partner with SHRM Government Affairs
  • Community
    back
    Community
    Woman raising hand in group
    Find a SHRM Chapter

    Easily find a local professional or student chapter in your area.

    • Chapters

      Find local connections from over 607 chapters and state councils and create your personalized HR network.

      SHRM Connect

      Post polls, get crowdsourced answers to your questions and network with other HR professionals online.

      SHRM Northern California

      Join SHRM members in the greater San Francisco Bay area for local events and networking.

    • Membership Councils

      Learn about SHRM's five regional councils and the Membership Advisory Council (MAC).

      • Membership Advisory Council
      • Regional Councils
    • Volunteers

      Learn about volunteer opportunities with SHRM.

      • Volunteer Leader Resource Center
Join Today
Renew
Rejoin Now
Renew
  • Store
    • Global
    • India
    • MENA
  • About
  • Book a Speaker
  • Foundation
  • Executive network
  • CEO Circle
  • Enterprise Solutions
  • Linkage Logo
SHRM
Sign In
  • Account
    • My Account
    • Logout
Close

  1. Topics & Tools
  2. Workplace News & Trends
  3. HR Magazine
  4. HR Magazine: Are Your Employee Drug Tests Accurate?
Share
  • Linked In
  • Facebook
  • Twitter
  • Email

Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet, consectetur adipiscing elit. Vivamus convallis sem tellus, vitae egestas felis vestibule ut.


Error message details.

Copy button
Reuse Permissions

Request permission to republish or redistribute SHRM content and materials.


Learn More
Feature

HR Magazine: Are Your Employee Drug Tests Accurate?

January 1, 2003 | By Diane Cadrain



HR Magazine, January 2003

Vol. 48, No. 1

Beware of products that aim to help employees obtain fake urinalysis results.

The Whizzinator, an easy-to-conceal, simple-to-use device with a realistic prosthetic penis, comes complete with an adjustable belt, a 4-ounce vinyl bag, dehydrated toxin-free urine and organic heat padsall for only $149.95.

Why would HR professionals need to know about this contraption?

Because The Whizzinator, made by Puck Technologies of Signal Hill, Calif., is only one of a swarm of products that aims to help employees - both male and female - beat your company's drug tests.

Other items available on the Internet include products that potential test cheaters ingest or drop into specimen cups. There is even "clean" urine for sale that drug abusers can substitute for their own.

The existence of these products is bad news for employers, who fork over considerable sums of money each year to test their employees.

Reasons for conducting these tests vary widely. Some employers, including those in the transportation and nuclear power industries, are required by federal law to test employees for drug use. Others face similar mandates at the state and local level.

Some employers test voluntarily because they operate in one of the 11 states that offer discounted workers compensation premiums to companies that have drug-free workplaces. In fact, 97 percent of Fortune 500 companies have drug-free workplace policies, according to the Institute for a Drugfree Workplace. Also, 67 percent of employers have drug-testing policies, says the American Medical Association.

Actually, all organizations have a practical incentive to test, given that substance abusers generally are not ideal employees. According to the American Council on Drug Education, drug abusers are:

  • 10 times more likely to miss work than those who are clean and sober.
  • 3.6 times more likely to be involved in on-the-job accidents.
  • 5 times more likely to file workers comp claims.
  • 33 percent less productive.

In addition, more than 75 percent of all drug users are employed somewhere, according to the federal Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration (SAMHSA), a division of the Health and Human Services Department (HHS).

Employers aren't the only ones who pay the price for drug abuse; employees pay a heavy toll also. Substance abuse jeopardizes health, self-esteem, relationships and income. The price tag is so high, starting with the stigma of addiction and ending with the ultimate disgrace of discharge, that some employees would do anything to avoid a positive result.

Enter the entrepreneurs.

How Employees Cheat

"Most of the products for beating drug tests are for urine tests, because 90 percent of employers who do drug testing take urine samples," says Donna Smith, Ph.D., senior vice president of Substance Abuse Management Inc. (SAMI) in St. Petersburg, Fla., a third-party administrator of drug-free workplace programs.

"By far the most preferred resource is dilution," says Leo Kadehjian, Ph.D., an independent biomedical consultant in Palo Alto, Calif. "There are many products available on the Internet that claim to help rid the body of toxins. But they work only because of the large amounts of water the user has to consume along with them."

Another way to beat a drug test is to add chemicals to a urine specimen, thereby disrupting the testing process itself or making the drugs undetectable. In the past, test cheaters used common household chemicals such as denture tablets, eye drops or bleach. Today, entrepreneurs are offering more sophisticated products. These include:

  • Oxidizing agents, which chemically alter or destroy drugs and/or their metabolites. Examples include products named Klear, Whizzies and Urine Luck.
  • Non-oxidizing adulterants, such as UrineAid and Clear Choice, which change the pH of a urine sample or the ionic strength of the sample, or cross-link the enzymes used in many tests.
  • Surfactants, or soaps, such as Mary Janes Super Clean 13, which, when added directly to a urine sample in the proper amounts, can form microscopic droplets with fatty interiors that trap fatty marijuana metabolites, making them invisible in screening tests.
  • The Whizzinator and other products that let employees substitute drug-free urine for their own. One intrepid Hendersonville, N.C., entrepreneur, Kenneth Curtis of Privacy Protection Service, even sells his own urine - guaranteed drug and adulterant free - along with a substitution kit consisting of a pouch, a tube, a chemical hand warmer and a temperature monitoring system.

For products like these, the best detection methods - pat-downs or direct observation of someone giving a sample - skate along the edges of privacy violation. Federal rules allow those actions only if theres a good reason to believe the person may be cheating. That presents a challenge for employers and the drug testing industry, which is onto such scams.

Testing Industry Fights Back

"As adulterant companies come out with new products, labs test to detect what it is they're using to mask the drug," says Laura Shelton, executive director of the Drug and Alcohol Testing Industry Association (DATIA) in Alexandria, Va.

Employees at testing firms also reconnoiter enemy camps by reading the counterculture periodical High Times, adds Kadehjian. "They search the Internet, they buy the chemicals, they do the research, then they publish their results in the scientific publications. As soon as they've addressed one adulterant, another gains popularity. Its a challenge to try to stay ahead of them."

One company - Nevada-based PassYourDrugTest.com (PYDT) - claims to keep up with current testing methods and trends by employing four "freedom fighters" who work in drug test labs and who funnel information to PYDT.

In spite of such efforts, it appears the drug test industry is gaining the upper hand. "Drug test fraud has been decreasing to some extent," says Shelton. "It's fairly small right now." In all of 2001, 12,500 samples - out of 20 million to 25 million tests performed each year - were adulterated, she says.

Shelton's assertion is borne out by research from Quest Diagnostics Inc., a giant diagnostic test firm based in Teterboro, N.J. According to the Quest Drug Testing Index, a widely respected semiannual survey, the number of individuals who used adulterants to thwart drug tests declined by 48 percent in the first half of 2000 - when the labs started seriously testing for cheaters - compared to the previous year. The research is based on more than 6 million tests that Quest labs performed. There are more than 50 testing labs in the country, Shelton says.

Meanwhile, states and the federal government are watching the drug test cheating industry and taking measures to prevent fraud. But, thus far, their efforts have been far from complete. While cheaters efforts are being thwarted, one employee who brings his drug habit to work is one too many. Its still up to HR to ensure that your workers do not put their colleagues, the company, your customers or the general public at risk.

States Crack Down

STATES TAKE ACTION

The following states passed laws making drug test fraud a crime.
StateYear the Law Was Enacted
New Jersey2002
North Carolina2002
Virginia2001
Oregon2001
South Carolina1999
Pennsylvania1997
Louisiana1995
Texas1991
Nebraska1988
Alarmed by Internet ads that tout ways to fool drug tests, nine states have passed laws making it a crime to engage in drug test fraud. (See "States Take Action," right.) Typically, these laws target both the test-taker and those who make or sell products that enable employees to fake test results. But there are some variations.

In Louisiana, for example, the law covers only those who take court-ordered drug tests, so its workplace implications are limited. Pennsylvanias law criminalizes only the use of drug-free urine, not adulterants. Nebraska bars only the sale, purchase or use of "body fluids" to alter drug test results.

On a related note, Alabama and Idaho bar employees from jobless benefits if they hand in adulterated urine samples, although neither state has criminalized the sale or use of drug test cheating products.

So far, except for one case in South Carolina, there have been no criminal prosecutions under these laws. The single exception is the 2001 conviction of urine-selling entrepreneur Curtis under South Carolinas 1999 law. While his criminal case was pending appeal, Curtis moved his business across the state line to North Carolina, but that state passed a law this year that bars:

  • Selling, giving away, distributing or marketing urine intended to defraud a drug test.
  • Attempting to defeat a test by spiking or substituting a sample.
  • Adulterating a sample.
  • Possessing or selling adulterants.

But that's about it for prosecutions under the laws. In Oregon, for example, Rep. Robert Patridge says he hasnt even checked to see whether anyone has been prosecuted under the state bill he sponsored in 2001. "We primarily set it up as a deterrent, as a safe workplace tool, and as an accountability issue," he says.

Loopholes in Federal Guidelines

Current federal guidelines, led by Department of Transportation (DOT) standards (widely considered the gold standard), may not be casting a tight enough net around test fraud. For example, current rules don't require testing for adulteration and dilution: Employers have to request it.

A set of proposed HHS rules would change that, requiring "specimen validity testing" for all urine samples. Officials expect that proposal to pass, but the process is slow.

Another limitation of the current rules is that they may not be finding all the folks who dilute their urine. Dilution is by far a bigger problem than adulteration, says Kadehjian. The DOT guidelines consider a specimen diluted only if its eight times more diluted than normal.

"There are sanctions only if the urine is so dilute it can't be human," says Kadehjian. "Specimens below the dilute cutoff don't happen easily. And the only sanction for diluted but otherwise acceptable specimens is that the next time a specimen is demanded of that donor, it may be collected under direct observation. Obviously, direct observation is pointless if a person has taken in a lot of water to dilute their specimen."

SAMI's Smith disagrees that the dilution standard is too lax. "The cutoff is extra generous, but some of the population produces that kind of urine. People on Weight Watchers have to drink 12 8-ounce glasses of water in a 12-hour period," she says. "I don't think the government should change the dilution criteria. They would pick up a number of people because of their dietary and fluid intake."

But Smith acknowledges that cheating is still going on.

The fact that current federal standards make it hard to catch frauds doesn't mean that employers' hands are tied. You can ask for specimen validity testing even if it is not required. "The vast majority of employers do it," says Smith. "It doesn't cost a lot more."

And employers can set their own stricter standards for adulteration and dilution.

"Private companies often forget that they can have a more stringent program," says Kadehjian. "They can request the lab to look for adulteration and dilution at stricter cutoff levels."

Kadehjian cites the case of a tanker that ran aground in the Mississippi River. The employee at the helm tested negative for drug use under Coast Guard regulations, but positive under the employer's own more stringent cutoff. The employer discharged the employee, and the court upheld the discharge, citing the public policy against workplace drug use.

Meanwhile, the entrepreneurs say business is booming.

"Business is very good," confirms Sue Thompson, an herbalist with PYDT. "Those new state laws really don't affect us. You have to realize that where there's a will there's a way. Business is, and will remain, steady. PassYourDrugTest.com will continue to help anyone who asks and will stand behind our words 100 percent, anytime."

The feds are also undaunted. "We have our challenge," responds Donna Bush, Ph.D., chief of drug testing at SAMHSA. "But that doesn't stop us."

Diane Cadrain is an attorney and has been covering workplace legal issues for 19 years. She is legislative affairs director of the Human Resource Association of Central Connecticut.

Drug and Alcohol Testing
Employment Testing
Risk Management
Talent Acquisition
Work Life Integration

Artificial Intelligence in the Workplace

​An organization run by AI is not a futuristic concept. Such technology is already a part of many workplaces and will continue to shape the labor market and HR. Here's how employers and employees can successfully manage generative AI and other AI-powered systems.



Related Content

Kelly Dobbs Bunting speaks onstage at SHRM24
(opens in a new tab)
News
Why AI+HI Is Essential to Compliance

HR must always include human intelligence and oversight of AI in decision-making in hiring and firing, a legal expert said at SHRM24. She added that HR can ensure compliance by meeting the strictest AI standards, which will be in Colorado’s upcoming AI law.

(opens in a new tab)
News
A 4-Day Workweek? AI-Fueled Efficiencies Could Make It Happen

The proliferation of artificial intelligence in the workplace, and the ensuing expected increase in productivity and efficiency, could help usher in the four-day workweek, some experts predict.

(opens in a new tab)
News
How One Company Uses Digital Tools to Boost Employee Well-Being

Learn how Marsh McLennan successfully boosts staff well-being with digital tools, improving productivity and work satisfaction for more than 20,000 employees.

HR Daily Newsletter

Stay up to date with the latest HR news, trends, and expert advice each business day.

Success title

Success caption

Manage Subscriptions
  • About SHRM
  • Careers at SHRM
  • Press Room
  • Contact SHRM
  • Book a SHRM Executive Speaker
  • Advertise with Us
  • Partner with Us
  • Copyright & Permissions
  • Post a Job
  • Find an HR Job
Follow Us
  • LinkedIn
  • Facebook
  • Twitter
  • Instagram
  • YouTube
  • SHRM Newsletters
  • Ask An Advisor

© 2025 SHRM. All Rights Reserved

SHRM provides content as a service to its readers and members. It does not offer legal advice, and cannot guarantee the accuracy or suitability of its content for a particular purpose. Disclaimer


  1. Privacy Policy

  2. Terms of Use

  3. Accessibility

Join SHRM for Exclusive Access to Member Content

SHRM Members enjoy unlimited access to articles and exclusive member resources.

Already a member?
Free Article
Limit Reached

Get unlimited access to articles and member-exclusive resources.

You've reached the limit of 1 free article this month. Join to access unlimited articles and member-only resources.

Already a member?
Free Article
Exclusive Executive-Level Content

This content is for the SHRM Executive Network and Executive Content Subscription members only.

You've reached the limit of 1 free article this month. Join the Executive Network and enjoy unlimited content.

Already a member?
Free Article
Exclusive Executive-Level Content

This content is for the SHRM Executive Network and Executive Content Subscription members only.

You've reached the limit of 1 free article this month. Join and enjoy unlimited access to SHRM Executive Network Content.

Already a member?
Unlock Your Career with SHRM Membership

Please enjoy this free resource! Join SHRM for unlimited access to exclusive articles and tools.

Already a member?

Your membership is almost expired! Renew today for unlimited access to member content.

Renew now

Your membership has expired. Renew today for unlimited access to member content.

Renew Now

Your Executive Network membership is nearing its expiration. Renew now to maintain access.

Renew Now

Your membership has expired. Renew your Executive Network benefits today.

Renew Now