Instant Drug Testing — Introduction
Instant drug testing — also called point-of-collection testing (POCT) or rapid drug testing — gives an on-the-spot screening result in 5 minutes. It's used widely in non-DOT employment, pre-employment, post-accident, and reasonable-suspicion contexts. This module covers everything you need to collect, read, and document an instant test correctly.
What This Module Covers
- What instant drug testing is and when to use it
- FUO vs CLIA-Waived — and which applies to YOUR program
- Device types and how to choose
- The collection procedure step-by-step
- Reading results — and the "two lines = negative" rule
- What to do with a non-negative result
- Documentation that protects you and the employer
Who This Is For
Non-DOT collectors, HR / safety managers handling onsite testing, and clinic staff who run rapid screening for workplace programs.
Regulatory Context — FUO vs CLIA-Waived
Instant drug testing is NOT under 49 CFR Part 40. But two regulatory frameworks shape it: FUO (Forensic Use Only) device classification and the CLIA Certificate of Waiver requirement. Knowing which applies — based on the device and the purpose — is the difference between compliant and exposed.
Two Frameworks
- FUO (Forensic Use Only) — the device is labeled for forensic use only, used to make employment decisions. NOT a medical / clinical test. CLIA does NOT apply to FUO devices for employment purposes.
- CLIA-Waived — the device is FDA-cleared as a clinical diagnostic. Using it for a clinical decision triggers CLIA Certificate of Waiver requirements.
Which Applies to You?
| Purpose | Device | CLIA? |
|---|---|---|
| Employment / forensic | FUO device | No |
| Clinical / diagnostic | CLIA-Waived device | Yes — need Certificate of Waiver |
| Employment using CLIA device | CLIA-Waived device, used forensically | Generally no — but verify state law |
State Variations
Five states regulate workplace drug testing differently:
- CA · California — state CLIA + federal CLIA
- MD · Maryland — state CLIA + federal CLIA
- PA · Pennsylvania — state CLIA + federal CLIA
- RI · Rhode Island — state CLIA + federal CLIA
- NY · New York — partial HHS-approved alternative program
- WA · Washington — full HHS-approved alternative program
The Collector
A non-DOT instant test collector follows employer policy + the device IFU. No federal qualification certificate exists for non-DOT testing — but training, documentation, and consistency matter for legal defensibility.
Definition
A non-DOT instant test collector is a trained individual who:
- Verifies donor identity per employer policy
- Conducts the collection (urine, oral, or other)
- Operates the device per IFU
- Reads and documents results
- Initiates lab confirmation when non-negative
Conflicts of Interest
Same common-sense exclusions as DOT — avoid being the donor's direct supervisor, close relative, or close friend.
Recommended Training
- Knowledge of the device(s) you'll use
- Documented IFU walkthroughs
- 5+ supervised mock collections
- Annual refresher and result-reading proficiency
- CLIA Certificate of Waiver training if applicable
The Collection Site
The instant test site needs the same privacy and integrity controls as urine — restroom with bluing, secure work area, and no chance of adulterant access. Most "fail audit" findings happen at the site level.
Site Requirements (Urine Instant Tests)
- 1Single-stall restroom (or multi-stall with controls)
- 2Bluing in toilet and tank
- 3No accessible soap, cleaners, water source
- 4Clean work surface for the device and form
- 5Privacy — no observers
Site Requirements (Oral Instant Tests)
- Private area, adequate lighting
- Clean work surface
- No food/drink/tobacco within reach
Security
- Donor under continuous observation
- Devices stored secure pre-collection
- Results read within IFU window — no premature reads
- Specimen retained for lab confirmation if non-negative
Devices & Supplies
Devices come in cup, cassette, or dip-card form. Each has the same workflow: specimen → wait → read. Choosing FUO vs CLIA-Waived is the most consequential supply decision.
Device Formats
| Format | Best For |
|---|---|
| Integrated cup | Onsite urine — donor provides, cup auto-reads |
| Cassette | Lab-style cassette read after dropper aliquot |
| Dip card | Strip dipped directly into specimen |
| Oral kit | Saliva collection with absorbent pad → reader |
Required Supplies
- Test device — sealed, in date, FUO or CLIA-Waived per your program
- Non-DOT CCF — employer or program-specific
- Bluing (urine collections only)
- Tamper-evident tape / seals
- Gloves and PPE
- IFU — printed copy at site
- Lab shipping materials — for non-negative confirmation
Pre-Collection Checks
- Device expiration date — current
- Storage conditions met (temperature)
- Lot number recorded
- Package sealed and undamaged
The Non-DOT Custody & Control Form
Most non-DOT programs use a private (employer-branded or third-party) Custody and Control Form. It documents donor, collector, device, lot, expiration, result, and any non-negative referral.
Non-DOT CCF Structure
The form is not federally standardized for non-DOT. Most programs use a simplified version with:
- Donor information
- Employer information
- Reason for test
- Collection date / time
- Device manufacturer, lot, expiration
- Drug panel tested
- Result (negative / non-negative)
- Collector signature + donor signature
- Lab name (for non-negative shipment)
Copy Distribution
Typical 3-part structure:
- 1Copy 1 — collector retains (lab if non-negative)
- 2Copy 2 — employer
- 3Copy 3 — donor
Employer Information
For non-DOT instant testing, the employer or testing program sets the required information. Most programs mirror the DOT field set — donor, employer, reason, MRO referral pathway for non-negatives.
Required from Employer
- Donor name + ID number
- Employer name + contact
- Reason for test (pre-employment, random, RS, post-accident)
- Drug panel (5, 10, expanded)
- Confirmation lab name + shipping address
- MRO contact (if non-negatives are routed through MRO)
Donor ID & Eligibility
Donor ID and eligibility for non-DOT instant testing follows the employer's policy. Photo ID is standard. Some programs require a brief medication disclosure window before collection.
Acceptable ID
- Government photo ID
- Employer photo badge
- In-person identification by employer representative
Reasons to Defer or Reject
- ! No ID and no employer present
- ! Donor visibly intoxicated and unable to consent
- ! Donor refuses signature on the chain of custody
Medication Disclosure
Many non-DOT programs use an MRO. Donors disclose after the test if non-negative — not before. Disclosing before can bias the collector. Document policy and follow it.
The Collection & Reading Results
The collection is straightforward — provide the specimen, set the device, wait 5 minutes, read. Misreading is the most common error. The two-lines = negative rule trips up new collectors every time.
The Collection Procedure
Prep the Site & Supplies
Device, form, bluing, tape, gloves all out.
Verify ID
Photo ID. Match the name on the form.
Explain Procedure
What you're testing, the wait time, the meaning of non-negative.
Complete Form
Donor and collector sections filled in. Device lot, expiration recorded.
Donor Empties Pockets & Washes Hands
Same as DOT — coats off, pockets emptied, hands washed.
Provide the Container / Open the Device
In donor's view.
Receive Specimen
Volume per device IFU. For urine: ≥ 30 mL typically.
Activate the Device
Per IFU. Note start time.
Wait the IFU Time
Typically 5 minutes. Don't read early. Don't read late (most IFUs invalidate after 10 minutes).
Read the Result
Within the IFU window.
Reading Results — The "Two Lines = Negative" Rule
For every drug panel on the device:
- Control line (C) + Test line (T) BOTH present — Negative
- Control line only — NO test line — Non-Negative (preliminary positive)
- NO control line — Invalid (regardless of test line). Discard, repeat with a new device.
Document the Result
- Photograph the cassette / cup (optional but recommended)
- Mark each panel's result on the form
- Donor signs to acknowledge the read
- Collector signs to certify
When Things Go Sideways
When the instant test reads non-negative — or when something goes wrong — you switch into lab confirmation mode. Send the same specimen to a lab for GC/MS or LC/MS confirmation. Never report a "positive" from an instant device.
Non-Negative Result
A non-negative is not a positive. It's a preliminary screening result that must be confirmed by a lab using GC/MS or LC/MS.
Don't Tell the Donor They Tested Positive
Say: "Your screening result is non-negative for X. We send the specimen to the lab for confirmation."
Seal & Ship the Specimen
Same specimen — pour into split bottles (A/B), seal, donor initials, complete chain of custody.
MRO Workflow
Lab → MRO → donor → employer. MRO contacts donor for medical explanation.
Invalid Result
- ! No control line — device malfunction
- Discard, document lot number
- Repeat with a new device
- Two invalids in a row → send specimen to lab and notify employer
Refusal Triggers
- ! Refuses to provide specimen
- ! Refuses to sign chain of custody
- ! Leaves the site before collection complete
- ! Caught adulterating or substituting
Out of Range Temperature
Same as DOT — if urine temp is < 90°F or > 100°F, suspect tampering. Document, send to lab if program permits, follow employer policy on observed re-collection.
Training & Documentation
Non-DOT collectors don't have a §40.33 requirement — but documented training, IFU compliance, and ongoing QC keep the program defensible. CLIA-Waived testing for clinical purposes requires a Certificate of Waiver.
Recommended Training Structure
- aKnowledge of FUO vs CLIA-Waived; state law differences
- bDevice-specific IFU training
- c5+ supervised mock collections, including one non-negative
- dResult-reading proficiency on photo / live samples
- eAnnual refresher
- fDocument everything — keep records of every collector and every training event
CLIA Certificate of Waiver (when applicable)
If your program uses CLIA-Waived devices for clinical purposes:
- Apply with HHS CMS (Form CMS-116)
- Pay biennial fee (~$180)
- Follow manufacturer IFU exactly (no modifications)
- Maintain QC records per device IFU
- Some states require state-level CLIA in addition (CA, MD, PA, RI)
Recommended Retention
| Record | Period |
|---|---|
| Negative CCFs | 1 year |
| Non-negative CCFs & lab confirmations | 5 years |
| Device lot / QC logs | 2 years |
| Collector training records | While active + 2 years |
Best Practices
Most instant test problems come from misreading lines, expired devices, or skipping the confirmation step on a non-negative. Build a checklist and run it every time.
Top 10 Instant Test Mistakes
- 1Reading the test before the 5-minute window
- 2Reading past the 10-minute window (invalid)
- 3Calling a non-negative "positive" to the donor
- 4Using an expired device
- 5Forgetting to record device lot number
- 6Skipping the chain-of-custody form for non-negatives
- 7Misreading the control vs test line (faint test line = still negative)
- 8Forgetting bluing → specimen dilution
- 9Doing a CLIA-Waived clinical test without a Certificate of Waiver
- 10No retention policy for QC and CCFs
Best Practices Checklist
- Always confirm device type (FUO vs CLIA-Waived) and program purpose
- IFU printed at the site — read it before each shift
- Record lot + expiration on every form
- Stay within the IFU read window — every time
- Non-negative = lab confirmation, MRO review, donor explanation. Never "positive."
- Document refusals and incidents with photos when possible
Need help setting up an instant testing program? Contact us about training and program design.