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49% of America’s Human Resource Depts Saying Opioids Impacting their Workforce

49% of America’s Human Resource Depts Say Opioids Impacting their Workforce

(Article summary/highlights) – https://www.dailymail.co.uk/health/article-6435079/HALF-Americas-HR-departments-say-opioids-affected-workforce-study-finds.html

oxycodone

A new survey by The Hartford, an insurance company, found that 49% of American businesses say the opioid epidemic is affecting their offices and work sites, yet only 18% of employees feel they could recognize the effects of opioid abuse.

Fast facts:

  • Nearly one in three Americans knows someone struggling with an opioid addiction. That person might be a friend, a family member, or a co-worker.
  • Only 18 percent felt confident that they would recognize the signs of opioid addiction.
  • In total, the opioid epidemic is estimated to cost the US economy some $40 billion a year.
  • National Security Council says that employers have to spend three times more on healthcare costs for employees with substance abuse disorders than they do on other employees.
    • The NSC urges employers to maintain strong policies against drug use, screen for opioids specifically and train employees to recognize warning signs that someone may be misusing or at risk for misusing opioids.

The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) notes that, in the current opioid abuse epidemic, many people can trace their struggle with addiction back to a prescription for a narcotic painkiller, given to them after a dental surgery, back injury, or other instance of serious pain. Below is a list of some of the most addictive opiates that are commonly abused. Note that nearly all are available via prescription.

  1. Oxycontin
  2. Opana
  3. Demerol
  4. Percocet
  5. Vicodin
  6. Methadone
  7. Morphine
  8. Fentanyl
  9. Dilaudid
  10. Heroin

Warning signs of opioid abuse:

Material Signs

  • Presence of syringes or needles in their rooms that have not been used for other medical purposes.
  • Presence of burned silver spoons in their bedrooms.
  • Gum wrappers and aluminum foils with notable burn marks. 
  • Missing shoelaces. Many heroin addicts use shoe laces as some form of a tie off for injection sites.
  • Presence of small plastic bags that contain a fine white powdery residue.
  • Presence of strange water pipes or other types of small pipes.

Behavioral Signs

  • Lying or other forms of deceptive behaviors.
  • The person does not maintain eye contact and at times and their field of vision seems distant.
  • Unusual increase in time spent for sleeping.
  • Increase in garbled, incoherent or slurred speech.
  • Sudden and alarming worsening of school or work performance, which may include expulsion or loss of jobs.
  • Decreased levels of attention to their physical appearance, outlook, and hygiene.
  • Loss of self-drive, apathy, and motivation toward future goals.
  • Withdrawal from family members and friends.
  • Making new friends with no natural tie and spends quite a lot of time with them.
  • Complete lack of interest towards favorite sports and hobbies.
  • Repeated instances of borrowing money from loved ones or stealing from them and to some extent, unexplained loss of valuables. This is done with a motive of getting money to buy drugs.
  • Strange and unusual hostile behaviors toward friends and loved ones. This may include putting blame on them for broken commitments or for withdrawal.
  • Regular and common comments which to an extent indicate a decline in self-esteem and worsening body image.
  • Wearing loose clothes such as long sleeves or long pants even in very hot weather conditions in order to conceal needle marks.

 

Workplace training:

AtHandTraining.com provides online Drug Free Workplace and D.O.T. mandated reasonable suspicion drug and alcohol training for both small and large organizations. Over 2500 companies trust AtHandTraining to provide cost effective training, available 24/7 from nearly any internet connected device.

 

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Click Here To Buy DOT Supervisor Course – $35 or less!

Click Here To Buy DOT Employee Drug Awareness Course – $10 or less!

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Reasonable Suspicion Supervisor Training

Reasonable Suspicion Supervisor Training

HR managers -Is your organization regulated by the Department of Transportation? If yes then we’ll show you how to quickly fulfill this often overlooked DOT training requirement for your supervisors whether you have one, two or hundreds of supervisors.

Who needs this training and how often does DOT require it be taken?

Any supervisor or employee who has the ability to initiate a reasonable suspicion drug or alcohol test and is covered under any of the Department of Transportation agencies FMCSA, FAA, FTA, USCG, PHMSA.

See regulatory requirements for all DOT modes here.

Is athandtraining.com online training DOT compliant?

Yes. Thousands of companies utilize online training every year to fulfill the 60 minutes drug and 60 minutes alcohol reasonable suspicion supervisor training requirements for FMCSA (trucking) , FAA (aviation), FTA (transportation), USCG, PHMSA (pipeline). See the CFR regulations here.

Why online?

In person training sessions are nice but they can be expensive and hard to coordinate with trainer and employee schedules, or maybe you just need to ensure one or two employees are trained as part of their onboarding process. DVD video courses are typically outdated, poorly produced and just might put your employees into a comatose state. Employees are more likely to surf their smart phone than engage with a video. AtHandTraining’s online course can only be completed if your supervisors are engaged with the content and pass quizzes ensuring they understand the important concepts.

Top 6 benefits of using AtHandTraining’s online course:

#1. Ensure DOT compliance for 60/60 drug and alcohol reasonable suspicion training. Certificates can be generated and training records are stored online.

#2. Employees can access it from anywhere, anytime with any device: iPad, iPhone, Android phone or tablet, PC, MAC- whatever, we have you covered.

#3. Course material updated yearly – new statistics, new drugs, new photos.

#4. Supervisors are quizzed along the way ensuring a basic level of understanding of the key concepts

#5. Administrator access to employee reports

#6. It’s available right now!

Bonus #7. No clip art. Nothing says “made in 1982” like a nice piece of clip art.

Other online courses run anywhere from $45-$79. Why is AtHandTraining’s course only $35 (or less if I buy 50 or more?)

Many other providers are piggy backing off of some other learning management system’s (“LMS”) software and must give a kick back to the LMS providers for every course taken. AtHandTraining manages our own system. We simply skipped the middleman.

dot supervisor training online

 

Purchase and access training right now!

credit cards accepted

 

Click Here To Buy DOT Supervisor Course – $35 or less!

Click Here To Buy DOT Employee Drug Awareness Course – $10 or less!

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Course topics – DOT reasonable suspicion supervisor training 

Intro: The Drug Free Workplace Act of 1988 | Reasonable suspicion training requirements (Regulations overview) | Record keeping | Course learning objectives

The Big Picture: The effects of substance abuse on society | The effects of substance abuse on the individual and family | The effects of substance abuse in the workplace

Drug Testing: The drug testing process & safeguards | Substance Abuse Professionals | DOT substance testing | Detection times | Refusals

Alcohol Testing:  The alcohol testing process | Evidential breath tests (EBTs) | Breath Alcohol content (BAC)

Drug Classifications & Effects of Use: Depressants | Stimulants | Hallucinogens | Other drugs of abuse (K2/Spice, Bath Salts, etc.)

The Supervisors Role:  Role overview | Confidentiality | Reasonable suspicion testing | Specific, Contemporaneous, articulable definitions w/examples

Common Use Indicators: Identifying abusers | Stereotyping | Physical symptoms | Behavioral  symptoms | Mental symptoms | Job performance | Drug paraphernalia

Intervention: Crisis vs. performance scenarios | Documentation | Enabling | Confrontation and interview | Dos and don’ts | Transportation to the collection site

Athandtraining.com DOT Reasonable Suspicion Supervisor Training fulfills:

Federal Motor Carrier Safety Administration (FMCSA) – 49CFR Part 382.603

Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) – 14 CFR Part 121 Append I & J

Federal Transit Administration (FTA) – 49 CFR 655

Pipeline and Hazardous Materials Safety administration (PHMSA)

U.S. Coast Guard (USCG) – §16.250   Reasonable cause testing requirements

 

New OSHA Rule Affects Post Accident Drug Testing

New OSHA Rule Affects Post Accident Drug Testing

injury form

Effective January 1st 2017, non-federally regulated employers need to ensure that they perform post-accident drug testing only in “situations in which employee drug use is likely to have contributed to the incident, and for which the drug test can accurately identify impairment caused by drug use.”  This, according to the “Improve Tracking of Workplace Injuries and Illnesses” OSHA final ruling.

Employers may need to update their drug testing policies that allow for blanket requirements that require drug testing be performed for any workplace accident. The ruling does not explicitly prohibit post-accident testing, rather, to ensure that post accident testing occurs only when the employer believes that impairment may have been a factor. The obvious problem with this type ruling is that it places employers in the sticky situation of having to determine when drug use would have “likely” been a factor in an accident. Employers need not specifically suspect drug or alcohol use or impairment before testing, but there should be a reasonable possibility that use by the reporting employee was a contributing factor to the reported injury or illness in order for an employer to require drug testing.

One can speculate that the new OSHA law’s intent is to remove the use of post-accident drug testing as a punishment for employees involved in workplace accidents. OSHA provided examples of scenarios where employers should not perform drug testing:

“it would likely not be reasonable to drug-test an employee who reports a bee sting, a repetitive strain injury, or an injury caused by a lack of machine guarding or a machine or tool malfunction. Such a policy is likely only to deter reporting without contributing to the employer’s understanding of why the injury occurred, or in any other way contributing to workplace safety.”

No Change for Federal Testing

For federally regulated testing, employers should continue to perform post-accident testing as required by DOT regulations. Since federal law requires post-accident testing, it would not be considered to be performed in a retaliatory manner. However, most federally regulated companies also have general “non-DOT” drug free workplace policies where this ruling would apply.

What can employers do?

  • Train supervisors to spot the sign and symptoms of drug use or abuse. All supervisors should have a basic knowledge on how to spot the signs and symptoms of drug use and abuse. Nearly all modern drug testing policies allow for reasonable suspicion drug and alcohol testing, but just having the provision in your policy is not going to prevent accidents. Having supervisors who can spot the signs and symptoms of drug use can help prevent accidents from happening in the first place. We happen to know of a good online program *wink, wink*  that can makes training your entire workforce a pretty easy task.
  • Update your drug and alcohol policy and ensure supervisors and employees have reviewed it. It’s more important than ever to ensure that your drug testing policy is up to date. Drug testing positivity rates have risen in the last two years and state laws have been rapidly changing largely due to a more relaxed sentiment about marijuana use. Chances are your drug testing policy has not been touched since it was originally drawn up. The Current Consulting Group can be a great place to get assistance if needed.
  • Consult your legal counsel. As always, it can be a good idea to chat up your legal counsel whenever changes like these occur.
  • Stay Updated. OSHA keeps a running list of changes that employers can check in on here