5 Ways Teens Might Cheat on Drug Tests—and How to Catch Them

These tricks are out there on the Web, so parents need to be informed

By Lindsay Lyon

Posted: August 6, 2008

Google "beat drug test," and the search engine spits out page upon page of ploys and products that can make incriminating urine seem drug free. All it takes is a computer-savvy teen to access them. The ease of cheating, in fact, is one of at least seven reasons parents shouldn't try to test their kids for drug use. Instead, experts say, they should seek out a professional assessment.

"Cheating remains the Achilles' heal of drug urine testing in all settings," says Robert DuPont, president of the Institute for Behavior and Health Inc. and former director of the National Institute on Drug Abuse. With increasing opportunities for testing—by prospective employers, schools, and parents—experts worry that teens may have more impetus than ever to try. Last week, at the American Association for Clinical Chemistry's annual meeting in Washington, D.C., toxicologist Amitava Dasgupta of University of Texas-Houston medical school demonstrated various ways that employees try to beat workplace drug tests—and how experts foil these schemes in the laboratory. There's nothing to stop kids from using the same tricks, and there's no guarantee that parents will be able to catch them at home.

Here are five ways—some of them downright dangerous—that teens may try to cheat drug tests. They're all described elsewhere on the Internet, so parents should be aware of them.

1. Tampering. A sprinkle of salt or a splash of bleach, vinegar, detergent, or drain cleaner is all that's needed to muck up a urine specimen. These and other household substances are all too often smuggled into the bathroom and used to alter the composition of urine, making the presence of some illegal substances undetectable, says Dasgupta. Same goes for chemical concoctions sold all over the Internet. Sometimes these additives or "adulterants" will cloud or discolor urine, easily casting suspicion on the specimen, but others leave the sample looking normal. Laboratory toxicologists employ simple tests to catch these cheats. For example, a few drops of hydrogen peroxide will turn urine brown if it's been mixed with pyridinium chlorochromate, an otherwise-imperceptible chemical designed to foil drug tests.

2. Water-loading. Gulping fluids before providing urine, a long-standing tactic, is still the most common way that teens try to beat tests, says Sharon Levy, a pediatrician and director of the Adolescent Substance Abuse Program at Children's Hospital Boston. Whether cheats use salty solutions to induce thirst, flushing agents that increase urine output, or just plain old H20, their aim is to water down drugs so they can't be detected. Some testing facilities may check urine for dilution and deem overly watery samples "unfit for testing." But consuming too much fluid too quickly can occasionally have dire consequences. "Water intoxication" reportedly killed a woman following participation in a radio show's water drinking contest, says Alan Wu, a professor of laboratory medicine at the University of California-San Francisco.

3. Switching drugs. Perhaps most alarming, says Levy, is that teens bent on defeating drug tests will sometimes switch their drug of choice to an undetectable (or harder to detect) substance that's considerably more hazardous. Inhalants, for example, include numerous types of chemical vapors that typically produce brief, intoxicating effects. "You don't excrete [inhalants] in your urine," says Levy, but "inhaling is acutely more dangerous than marijuana." Indeed, inhalants can trigger the lethal heart problem known as "sudden sniffing death" in otherwise healthy adolescents, according to the National Institute on Drug Abuse. The tragic case of young David Manlove is an example.

i luv my pot

Ya this is all a bunch of crap i smoke tons of high grade. And i have no trouble with the world. I smoke all day long most ppl dont even know and i dont care its a plant i have a human right to do what i want not cause some old politions who think its bad make it illegal. Only the good things in life are illrgal y? Why cant we just be left alone smoke are shrubs and love each other theirs a million worse things than pot. y is it always the most important. Have u heard of any one being so stoned they beat their wife? Overdosed? Died? So whats the deal with booze? Why is that legal when everyday ppl die from it in someway.

pot head of ND @ Feb 09, 2010 04:40:48 AM

wowowow

TTTRRRUUUEEEEEEE DATTTT i got tested the day i went to school stoned an dnow look at me lol

a girl of NY @ Feb 07, 2010 01:06:26 AM

You'd be better off

You're right that pot is essentially no worse than alcohol and someday it probably will be legal to use. Both pot and booz damage your health, kill the vital cells of your brain, and get in the way of people functioning sober. I won't dispute that they can both mellow you out.

Both substances (not to mention most illegal drugs and plenty of prescription drugs too) are often used by careless people before/during driving and in other dangerous situations. From the language and tone of some of the above responses, I would suspect these people might fit in this category. This is one big problem.

Lastly, if you do use drugs with any regularity, there's a much greater likelihood that you'll experience diminished motivation, energy, and personal growth. The chance of becomming ill with any number of unpleasant diseases is multiplied by a substantial number that I don't think is truly known.

Don't think of it as everyone ganging up on you, or your parents controlling you. Drugs are very capable of messing up your life and most of us just don't want to see that happen to anyone.

Dr. Harris Meyer of CA @ Feb 01, 2010 00:17:41 AM

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