We provide step by step instructions on how to administer the drug testing program.
All of our tests are urine or saliva based.
We pride ourselves on our test kits that are US FDA 510(K) approved for accuracy and meet the same drug cut-off levels established by the United States Department of Transportation for drugs of abuse testing. The home test kit is used to check for the presence of several commonly used drugs of abuse: marijuana, cocaine, ecstasy, methamphetamine, and opiates.
In addition to in-home drug testing and workplace drug testing, we offer comprehensive services in the following areas:
Drug Detection Assessment Hair Follicle Drug Testing DNA and Paternity Testing In-Home Drug Testing Workplace Drug Testing Background Checks
Three Components of Our Program
General Facts About Drugs Today
The averageage for kids to begin experimenting with illegal substances is 13.
The potency of marijuana THC levels is 15-20 times stronger than marijuana in the 1970s.
Every year from 1975 to 1999, at least 82% of high school seniors surveyed have said they find marijuana "fairly easy" or "very easy" to obtain. In 2000, 88.5% of high school seniors said it was fairly or very easy to obtain.
60 percent of youngsters who use marijuana before age 15 go on to use cocaine.
Columbia University has found that kids who smoke marijuana are 85 times more likely to use cocaine than their non-marijuana smoking peers.
On average, kids found by their parents to be using drugs, have been using for two years prior to discovery.
Most medical insurance policies have a clause that allows them to not pay a medical claim "if there is an illegal substance in the system, or an illegal act is being performed at the time of the loss." Parents can be held legally responsible for those bills.
Several states are enacting Parental Responsibility Laws in which the parent is held responsible for the behavior of the child.
Average cost of drug rehabilitation is $20,000 - $30,000 a month, with few, if any medical insurers paying anything on such a claim.
The number of offendersunder age 18 admitted to prison for drug offenses increased twelve fold (from 70 to 840) between 1985 to 1997. By 1997, drug offenders made up 11% of admissions among persons under 18 compared to 2% in 1985.
The US has higher rates of illicit drug use by young people than European nations, as noted by the Monitoring the Future survey: "The MTF study found that in 1999, 41% of tenth grade students in the United States had used marijuana or cannabis at least once in their lifetimes. All the participating European countries had a considerably lower rate of lifetime use, averaging 17%. This proportion varied among European countries from 1% in Romania to a high 35% in France, the United Kingdom and the Czech Republic."