New York Post

ON-JOB DRUGS SPIKE

16-yr. high: lab

- By NOAH MANSKAR

The share of American workers caught with marijuana and other drugs in their system reached a 16-year high last year before the coronaviru­s threatened to drive up drug use further, a study says.

Some 4.5 percent of workers tested positive for drugs in their urine in 2019, a rate higher than any year since 2003 and more than 28 percent above the 30-year low of 3.5 percent seen about a decade ago, according to a report Tuesday from Quest Diagnostic­s.

The medical testing giant says COVID-19 could accelerate the trend, as health officials warn people could use drugs to cope with stress and isolation during the pandemic.

“Organizati­ons will need to consider the impact of COVID-19 not only on workplace safety but also as a health concern for their employees for some time to come,” Barry Sample, Quest’s senior director of science and technology, said in a statement.

Last year’s surge in positive tests was driven in part by marijuana, which was detected more commonly than any other illicit substance with a positivity rate of 3.1 percent, according to Quest’s annual review of millions of drug tests.

That’s a nearly 11 percent increase from 2018 and a 29 percent jump from 2015, when pot was found in just 2.4 percent of urine tests, according to the testing company.

There was also a jump in positive results for methamphet­amine, particular­ly in the Midwest, where the positivity rate climbed to 0.16 percent last year from just 0.09 percent in 2015, the study found.

It’s not yet certain whether the pandemic has led to further drug use this year as lockdowns meant to control the virus sparked widespread layoffs and kept people cooped up at home.

But the early signs are not encouragin­g. Drug deaths in the first few months of 2020 rose about 13 percent from last year, “attributab­le partly to social isolation and other disruption­s caused by COVID-19,” Quest said, citing a July analysis from The New York Times.

The pandemic has also made it harder for people struggling with addiction to access treatment and has cut them off from support systems like Narcotics Anonymous, according to Dr. Nora Volkow, director of the National Institute on Drug Abuse at the National Institutes of Health.

“All of these aspects are translatin­g into much more stress,” Volkow said in a recent conversati­on with NIH Director Dr. Francis Collins. “And stress, as we know, is one of the factors that leads people to relapse. Stress is also a factor that leads many to increase the consumptio­n of drugs.”

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