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How Bad Eating Habit Spread Colorectal Cancer in Nigeria—Eniola Salu

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Cancer is one disease that is fast spreading in Nigeria and not much has been done by government to manage the situation.

The mention of cancer, like it used to be with HIV/AIDS in the past, sends a huge fear to people mainly because of the cost of managing it.

Though very expensive to treat, cancer, especially colorectal cancer, which is cancer of the colon or large intestines, is spreading fast in the country and one organisation that has taken the bull by the horn is the Niola Cancer Care Foundation (NCCF), which has Eniola Salu Akintunde as its chairperson.

Akintunde, who lost her husband to colorectal cancer, in this interview with Business Post to mark the World Cancer Day on Sunday, February 4, 2018, shared her views on the menace; causes, symptoms, prevention and others. Excerpts;

How is your organisation marking this year’s World Cancer Day

As one of the cancer NGOs in the country, we are marking the day with an advocacy with the media unlike last year where we had a walk.

Any reason for this

Yes, because this year’s event falls on a Sunday and it would be difficult to get people to do a walk when most of them would be in church. So, we believe using the media this year would be the best thing to do to create our cancer awareness to Nigerians.

At the moment, do you think cancer awareness is enough

No, it is not enough. Nigeria is a very religious country and this is one of our biggest challenges as an NGO in creating cancer awareness and that is why we are getting the clerics involved in our campaigns.

If someone has any health issue, he needs to see the doctors; while the pastors and Imam do the praying. We should not first seek the clerics’ help before rushing to the hospital when situationsare in critical stage. It is very important to first seek medical help to enable the religious leaders know where to channel their prayers to. In Nigeria, you hear people say ‘cancer is not my portion’, yes, cancer is nobody’s portion, but we need to do the needful medically.

Are the religious leaders embracing your idea

Yes, some are seeing reasons with us. There is this respected man of God on our board and when I had an experience with cancer, he was always advising us to go to the hospital, while he prayed for us. He even supported us financially, though I lost the person and that pushed me to start this NGO. When this man preaches, he advises members to seek medical help.

Cancer seems to be new to us in Nigeria, can you name the prominent cancers affecting us

Number one cancer affecting us is the breast cancer, followed by cervical, then the prostrate, lung and of recent, colorectal cancer, which most people do not know about. It is the cancer of the colon or the rectum.

Colorectal cancer is on the increase in Nigeria and people are not aware of it. Some just observe having stomach ache or blood in the stool or weight loss (symptoms). You need to check it out at the hospital to be sure it is not colorectal cancer.

The symptoms mentioned above are related to other common diseases, how can someone be sure if it is colorectal cancer or not

That is why someone needs to visit the hospital to get checked by the doctor and get the right diagnosis; this is another issue, the right diagnosis. There are some specific tests you need to do to detect colorectal cancer. The first is the Faecal Occult Blood Test (FOBT), which is checking the stool samples and the doctor will recommend further one which could be the colonoscopy and endoscopy tests to check what is in your stomach or colon to know if there is growth or not. And if there is growth in your colon, it does not necessarily mean you have cancer. It might be a polyp, and if it is, it is good news because it can be removed. But unfortunately, people don’t detect this cancer early because they must have been going to different hospitals treating something else.

Are the average hospitals equipped to quickly detect colorectal cancer

Yes, I think they should because these are minor tests. But what I will advise doctors to do is to refer patients when they cannot handle issues. It is not as bad as we think. There are good doctors in our hospitals despite their poor working conditions, but they need to stop doing wrong diagnosis and making situations get worse.

With the economic situation in the country, how easy is it for someone to treat colorectal cancer

It might interest you to know that there is a test for colorectal cancer that costs N1,000, which we help facilitate in our NGO, but people still not come for this test.

That’s serious

Yes, because some people get scared at the mention of cancer. That is one major challenge we face in this country.

In plain words, is it very expensive to treat or handle colorectal cancer

In plain words, it is not cheap to handle colorectal cancer, I must be sincere with you, but at least, the first test is cheap. If the first test shows colorectal cancer, the other tests are not cheap. We have consistently said managing cancer generally is not cheap, but we must do something about it. Everyone has a role to play in managing cancer; government, NGOs and others.

Now, how does your organisation help colorectal cancer patients

We have been playing our role to help cancer patients generally. We have some in LASUTH (Lagos State University Teaching Hospital) and LUTH. We had one colorectal cancer patient amongst those we have helped, though she eventually passed on. She had been to different hospitals getting treatment for ulcer and by the time she got to LUTH, her case was far gone. This was a lady in her 20s.

What age is colorectal cancer prominent

Colorectal cancer is prominent among those above 50 years. My late husband died of colorectal cancer at the age of 39, but colorectal cancer has now been detected in children below 14 years.

Was that the reason you came up with NCCF

Yes, because of the experience I had during his treatment of the cancer and also because there was no NGO dealing with colorectal cancer at that time, so there was a vacuum for me to fill. He passed on in India. But during his treating of the disease, we had different doctors abroad involved who were specialists. But here in Nigeria, you see one oncology doctor treating all the cancer patients.

So, what is your NGO doing to talk to medical practitioners on proper diagnosis of this cancer

We are doing this because they are the main stakeholders in this campaign. There is no way we want to reduce cancer death rate without getting them involved. They handle the cases, I am not a doctor but just an advocate or a surviving victim. We need the doctors and we are planning something with them this year. But when we have the opportunity to talk, even on social media, we tell doctors to give the right diagnosis.

What causes colorectal cancer

Food is the major cause of colorectal cancer. We have adopted the Western dieting system. Colorectal cancer used to be the major cancer death in the United States because of their eating habits. We left our organic food for processed food. We need to go back to our Nigerian eating system, eat what we produce and be mindful of how we grow our food (this to farmers). We also have to look into how we process our food. Why would someone use chemical used for embalming on pomo (cowhide) or use carbide to ripen plantain and you expect not to have cancer? Also, our borders are porous, allowing easy importation of processed and contaminated food items. This is where SON, customs and NAFDAC have huge roles to play. They should not look away because people are dying.

How far have you partnered with these agencies

We are doing our best because we need them to also achieve success in this cancer campaign. But back to the food issue, we just have to be mindful of what we consume. The Chinese did not throw away their culture; they still embrace their natural way of life unlike here in Nigeria, where we find it difficult to eat food wrapped in leaves, which they still use in Hong Kong. As populated as China is, the rate of cancer there is not as high as it is in some African countries.

And you think the food the Chinese eat is responsible for this

Yes, it is.

Apart from food, what other things cause colorectal cancer

Pollution, we have serious pollution problem in Nigeria; from the power generating set, vehicles and others.

But these are beyond the citizens’ control especially due to power situation in Nigeria

Yes, but we have to keep talking about this and we hope government will do what they need to do to make life easier for everyone.

How can someone prevent colorectal cancer

You can start with your food consumption, going to the market to buy fresh farm products. For the pollution from vehicles, government has to come up policies to stop it and also provide electricity to Nigerians, but food causes 60 percent of colorectal cancer in Nigeria. People should start consuming more vegetables to fight this type of cancer. We just have to do more about our eating habit and stop taking processed foods.

How can the National Assembly come in

They should put laws in place to control the sale and production of processed foods in the country. Is cancer not affecting them? Have they not lost people to cancer? My late husband was spending about N350,000 every 10 days to buy drugs to treat himself in 2013. I really do not want to talk about chemotherapy because it costs a lost and that is why at our NGO, we are passionate about prevention of cancer so that people do not have to spend money for treating what they can prevent. But government can spend less in cancer management in the country by taking the right steps. I know cancer is a global challenge, but governments around the world put policies in place to reduce the rate of the disease, which we are not doing.

There is the economic issue, religion issue, which is the main challenge in this country. How can someone say ‘cancer is not my portion?’ You see a lump somewhere in your body and you put anointing oil, believing that will solve the issue. I am not against anointing oil, I use it too, but I do what is needful. When I am sick, I approach the doctor. Cancer gives signs but we ignore them. We run to pastors and alfas, who tell us ‘it is the work of the Devil’. How long are we going to continue with this mentality? Let the clerics continue with their prayers, while you seek medical help. If God never knew the importance of medicine, he would not have given scientists medical breakthroughs or wisdom.

For example, IVF is working for some people now. Families now have the hopes of having children without intercourse, was it Satan that made that possible? People need to see that medicine was made for our good.

Do you think with time, people will see cancer as a normal disease

With the help of the media, we should achieve that. But the media should do more to talk about cancer. If every media house can dedicate five seconds each day to talk about cancer, it is not too much with the kind of problem the disease has caused in this country.

The survival rate of colorectal cancer is very high if detected early and that it why we are raising awareness about it. When you notice your bowel not moving or you see blood in your stool or you notice unexplained weight loss or you consistently have abdominal pain, quickly see a doctor because it means something is wrong. You don’t have to say cancer is not my portion. I said it too as well as my late husband, but lo and behold, he died of cancer. So please, cancer is nobody’s portion, nobody prays for it. My late husband was a Christian. Pastors and Imams have died of cancer.

Do you think Nigerians are scared of cancer because of the way it is made to look

Yes, because the management of cancer is expensive. How can someone be paying N350,000 to buy drugs to manage cancer. That same drug we bought in 2013 at that cost is over N1 million now. Why won’t people shout and run when you mention cancer to them? However, the survival rate of colorectal cancer is very high. This is why we advocate for early detection of cancer and even preach ways to prevent it through food consumption, lifestyle and exercise. If you are above 45 years, get screened for colorectal cancer. It is easier to detect it earlier than treating it with millions of Naira. One thing about cancer is that the more the patient needs money, the less is his chances of living.

Why is this so

It is because of the stage and when it gets to the late stage, it becomes very critical. This is sometimes because of wrong diagnosis. In a country of about 180 million people, maybe we have about four radiotherapy machines working. The other time, the minister said the machines were not working because of their inability to get spare parts, but can’t they get other machines?

But at Niola Cancer Care Foundation, we are committed to reducing cancer in the society by raising awareness about early detection. Like they say, prevention is better than cure.

How has government supported NGOs like yours in the cancer campaign

Well, we are still waiting for them to assist us. We really need them because it is not easy doing this from my pocket. I have had supports from individuals and organisations who see the passion I have for the cause, but we need government assistance too.

From my past experience, cancer drains the emotion, psychology, finance and others. It also affects families of the victims. Most times, some family members run away because of the stress involvedin dealing with cancer patients, especially due to the rapid change in the victim’s physical appearance. That is why Niola Cancer Care Foundation is committed to this cause and we have been doing it for the past three years, spending Christmas day with cancer patients. We do this to support and show love to them.

By now, Nigeria should have hospices for cancer patients, where they would be shown love because they have the right to be loved and cared for.

Has Lagos State government been supportive of this campaign

Yes, especially wife of the Governor, Mrs BolanleAmbode. She was at our launching as well as officials of the state government. LASUTH knows about us too.

I asked this question because Lagos State government has done well in the rape campaign

Yes, and I think they are working too to raise more awareness about cancer in our society. There was a time the Lagos State House of Assembly called us with other NGOs on a bill on cancer. We gave them our thoughts on the issue.

What is the bill about

It is on the management of cancer in Lagos State. It is really a good one.

If passed, what way will it change the system

It will change a lot because at moment, there are not proper cancer centres or hospitals around. One of our aims at NCCF is to build a cancer centre in each of the geo-political zones of Nigeria. From Ikorodu Road, did you see any cancer centre? In a country of over 180 million people with several dilapidated buildings everywhere used for nothing,and people are dying of cancer and other diseases.

Lagos is trying to build cancer centres in the state, from the bill I saw and we are ready to work with them.

What about big companies in Nigeria, have they supported you

Pfizer has been very helpful and supportive to our campaign. I really appreciate their effort. For getting in touch with our NGO to mark the World Cancer Day showed they have seen our impact and like it. Like Oliver Twist, we want more.

Have you carried celebrities along in the campaign for colorectal cancer

We have approached some celebs, but KeppyEkpeyongBassey and Lillian Amah-Aluko are the two we are working with us at the moment. I wish others can be like them. They have been really very supportive of the campaign without any form of payment made to them. We have spoken with some stars about this cancer awareness campaign, but they do not want to be associated with it.

Why

I don’t know, it is their personal reason. I have tried to talk to them to speak about it with their fans and I hope they will come on board soon.

How does exercise prevent colorectal cancer

Exercise helps prevent cancer generally and it is one thing we talk about too at Niola Cancer Care Foundation. Sometimes ago, we partnered with a gym outfit, Safari, to create awareness on preventing cancer with exercise because it helps the body’s metabolism. When you exercise, your body parts function well.

What do you intend to achieve with Niola Cancer Care Foundation

Niola Cancer Care Foundation is the first colorectal cancer NGO in Nigeria and we want to create awareness about the disease in Nigeria. I never knew about colorectal cancer until my late husband’s issue came up. But colorectal cancer is any tumour that starts from the colon to the rectum. At NCCF, we assist victims deal with the disease, emotions and others. We have our labs, but we are still expecting to have them equipped even though we have partnered with some top hospitals in Lagos. Dr AdedapoOsinowo, a cancer consultant, has been very helpful.

What hope do colorectal cancer patients have with Niola Cancer Care Foundation

My brother, their hope is on God, but we do our best to assist them in any way we can. We do not push any one that comes to us away. We put people through on how to manage the issue.

Do you have relationship with other cancer NGOs

Yes, we have. They job is enormous and we need each other’s support.

Is there any competition among the NGOs

That is one problem we have and I don’t understand why. My message to cancer NGOs is for us to work together and achieve the common goal of fighting this cancer menace.

Do you have supports of foreign partners

For now, we have not received any, but we would love to have them support us so as to make our work easier and our reach farther.

What are the main challenges you face.

Funding is our biggest challenge. We have space to have equipment to conduct tests in our office but we do not have the fund to get these equipment. We have consultants and volunteers ready to work with us, but have no machines to work with.

How can the government assist you

They should come up with good policies. Also, they should not try to gag us because they know genuine NGOs and the fake ones. We are actually doing what the government should be doing for its citizens.

Dipo Olowookere is a journalist based in Nigeria that has passion for reporting business news stories. At his leisure time, he watches football and supports 3SC of Ibadan. Mr Olowookere can be reached via [email protected]

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Health

Oyo Seals Ar-Rahmon Khabul Herbal Over Health Concerns

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OYRLEA

By Modupe Gbadeyanka

An Ibadan-based herbal company, Ar-Rahmon Khabul Herbal Nigeria Limited, has been sealed by the Oyo State Rule of Law Enforcement Authority (OYRLEA).

The state government, in a statement signed on Friday by the Commissioner for Information, Mr Dotun Oyelade, revealed that the herbal firm was shut down due to environmental violations and public health concerns.

The leader of OYRLEA, Mrs Aderonke Aderemi, explained that the action was taken after multiple petitions from residents alleging persistent offensive odour and health challenges linked to the company’s operations.

She noted that the state government swung into action “to protect public health, preserve environmental standards, and enforce regulatory compliance across the state.”

It was gathered that investigations identified tobacco leaf as a major component in its production process, generating a strong, putrid odour deemed hazardous to residents and capable of posing serious health risks to the surrounding community.

“Joint inspections by officials revealed that the company operates a herbal production facility within a densely populated residential area, in clear violation of environmental and public health standards,” the statement said, adding that further findings from the inspection include the emission of harmful and toxic gaseous substances into the atmosphere, the discharge of wastewater into a nearby community water body, the installation of a chimney deemed too short and directly facing residential buildings, and the accumulation of solid waste within the premises despite claims of engaging a waste contractor, among others.

Prior to the enforcement action, the agency had issued an abatement notice directing the company to cease operations and relocate within 21 days in accordance with the Oyo State Environmental, Sanitation and Waste Control Regulations.

OYRLEA, along with the agencies that carried out the enforcement, reiterates that air pollution, hazardous waste discharge, and improper waste management are violations of environmental laws.

Mrs Aderemi reaffirmed OYRLEA’s commitment to sustained monitoring and enforcement to ensure a safe and healthy environment for all residents.

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NAFDAC Receives Seized Pharmaceutical Products from Rivers Customs

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Rivers customs NAFDAC

By Bon Peters

The Port Harcourt Area I Command of the Nigeria Customs Service (NCS) has handed over pharmaceutical products intercepted at the Omagwa International Airport recently to the National Agency for Food and Drug Administration and Control (NAFDAC).

The spokesman for the command, Mr Barilule Aanee, an Assistant Superintendent of Customs 1, said in a statement that the items were given to NAFDAC on February 12, 2026, at the NAHCO Shed of the airport, where the seizure occurred.

The Customs Area Controller of the command, Comptroller Salamatu Atuluku, disclosed that the interception was made during routine examination and intelligence-driven scrutiny at the NAHCO Shed by officers of the Command in collaboration with relevant agencies.

She disclosed that six packages of pharmaceutical products, including Menotrophin 150 IU injections, Progesterone, and Isifrane, as well as three packages of medicaments containing Tramadol Ratiopharm injections, were discovered in two separate consignments.

The products, according to the statement, were neither properly declared nor accompanied by the mandatory NAFDAC certification required for lawful importation into Nigeria.

The Customs Area 1 chief further revealed that one shipment, originating under the name Zecho Oil and Gas Nigeria Limited for Elite Health Pharmacy Ltd, with Airway Bill No. 020 34858250, weighing 135 kilograms and amounting to 4,300 units, transported by Lufthansa Cargo Airline, was among the seized products.

More so, another consignment on Allied Airway Bill No. 574 34543283 from Amsterdam was falsely declared as spare parts.

She emphasised that regardless of the importer or volume involved, “no pharmaceutical product is permitted entry into Nigeria without proper declaration and regulatory clearance from NAFDAC.”

Comptroller Atuluku commended the diligence of the Customs Intelligence Unit and all officers involved, stressing that sustained interagency cooperation remained vital to strengthening enforcement and preserving the integrity of the nation’s supply chain.

While receiving the items, the Deputy Director of the NAFDAC Port Inspection Directorate, Pharm. Adepoju Bayo Raufu, thanked the customs for its vigilance and prompt handover of the intercepted items.

He assured that the agency would subject the items to appropriate regulatory procedures in line with its mandate to safeguard public health.

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Accurate Multi-Panel Drug Test Cups For Professionals

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drug test cups

In safety-sensitive workplaces, clinical settings, and staffing operations, reliable on-site drug screening is a practical first line of defense. Accurate multi-panel drug test cups for professionals combine speed with portability, allowing organizations to screen for multiple substances quickly while preserving chain-of-custody and sample integrity. This guide explains how these cups work, how to choose the right product for a professional setting, and how to manage administration, interpretation, and compliance to reduce legal risk and costly false positives.

What Multi-Panel Drug Test Cups Are And Who Should Use Them

Multi-panel drug test cups are self-contained immunoassay devices that screen a urine sample for multiple drug classes simultaneously, typically including amphetamines, cocaine metabolites, opioids, cannabinoids (THC), benzodiazepines, and others depending on the panel. They are designed for point-of-care use: a donor provides a urine specimen directly into the cup, and the integrated test strips produce rapid visual results within minutes.

Who should use them? Professionals that benefit most include:

  • Occupational health and human resources teams conducting pre-employment, post-incident, or random testing programs.
  • Substance use clinicians and treatment centers performing routine monitoring.
  • Staffing firms and temp agencies that need quick screening before placement.
  • Corrections and probation officers performing supervision checks.
  • Employers in transportation, construction, healthcare, and manufacturing where safety is critical.

For organizations prioritizing both speed and defensibility, multi-panel cups offer a pragmatic balance: they provide immediate screening to inform next steps while still allowing for confirmatory laboratory testing when required.

How Multi-Panel Test Cups Work: Technology And Accuracy Factors

At their core, most multi-panel cups use lateral flow immunoassay technology. Antibodies embedded on test strips bind to drug metabolites in the specimen: a visible line forms (or disappears) according to the assay design, indicating a negative or presumptive positive.

Key accuracy factors to understand:

  • Antibody specificity and cross-reactivity: High-quality assays use antibodies selected to minimize cross-reactivity with over-the-counter medications or endogenous compounds. Lower-grade tests may yield false positives when donors take legal medications that share similar metabolites.
  • Cutoff concentrations: Each assay has a cutoff (measured in ng/mL) that determines whether a result is reported as positive. Most professional cups follow SAMHSA or DOT cutoffs for workplace testing: knowing these thresholds reduces misinterpretation.
  • Temperature and matrix checks: Modern cups often integrate temperature strips and creatinine/oxidant checks to detect dilution or tampering. These integrity features improve the reliability of on-site results.
  • Operator influence: Proper collection, timing, and result reading windows directly affect accuracy. Even the best cup can produce incorrect readings if the test is read too early or too late.

Real-world accuracy is often expressed in sensitivity (ability to detect positives) and specificity (ability to rule out negatives). Professional cups from reputable manufacturers typically report >95% agreement with laboratory immunoassays at the stated cutoffs, though confirmatory GC-MS or LC-MS/MS remains the gold standard for legal or employment consequences.

Choosing The Right Cup For Professional Settings

Selecting the appropriate multi-panel drug test cup requires more than picking a high panel count. It’s about matching features to use case, workflow, and legal requirements.

Key Selection Criteria

  • Regulatory alignment: Choose cups that adhere to SAMHSA/DOT cutoffs if testing falls under federal guidelines.
  • Built-in integrity checks: Temperature, adulteration, and creatinine tests help detect tampering or dilution at collection.
  • Ease of use: Simple, unambiguous results and clear timing windows reduce operator error and training burden.
  • Documentation options: Cups that help clear labeling, lot tracking, and photo documentation streamline chain-of-custody.
  • Shelf life and storage needs: Longer shelf life and uncomplicated storage conditions simplify inventory management.

Panel Selection: Which Drugs To Include

Common professional panels are 5-, 8-, or 12-panel cups. Decisions should be risk-based:

  • 5-panel: Standard workplace screens (AMP, COC, OPI, THC, BZO).
  • 8–12 panel: Add methamphetamine, oxycodone, fentanyl, barbiturates, PCP, and others where clinical or workplace exposure warrants it.

Staffing and healthcare employers often opt for expanded panels that include fentanyl and synthetic opioids given their prevalence.

Sensitivity, Cutoffs, And False Positives

Higher sensitivity isn’t always better: it may detect clinically irrelevant low levels or passive exposure. Professional programs typically use established cutoffs to balance sensitivity and specificity. When a presumptive positive appears, organizations must have a policy for confirmatory testing rather than making employment decisions on a single cup result.

Adulteration Detection And Integrity Features

Buy cups with built-in tamper indicators: temperature strips (correct collection window), creatinine or pH checks, and oxidant detection. These features lower the likelihood of undetected sample manipulation and strengthen the defensibility of the screening process.

Best Practices For Collection And Administration

Accurate results start with consistent collection procedures and well-trained staff.

Chain Of Custody And Documentation

Maintain an unbroken chain of custody: donor identification, time-stamped collection, witness signatures, and secure transport for confirmatory samples. Use standardized forms and consider photo documentation or barcode systems that tie cups to donor records. This reduces disputes and protects both employer and donor.

Proper Sample Collection And Handling Steps

  • Verify donor identity and inspect the collection area for prohibited items.
  • Instruct the donor to provide an adequate volume into the cup: record temperature immediately.
  • Observe, where policy and law permit, to prevent substitution.
  • Seal and label samples promptly if they will be sent for confirmatory testing.
  • Adhere to manufacturers’ timing for reading results: most cups specify a 5–10 minute window.

Training Staff And Reducing Human Error

Regular staff training on procedure, result interpretation, and documentation reduces mistakes. Provide quick-reference guides, role-play common scenarios, and audit collections periodically to ensure compliance.

Interpreting Results And When To Confirm

On-site cups deliver presumptive results, actionable only within a clear policy framework.

Reading Immunoassay Results Correctly

Most cups use a two-line format: a control line indicating the test is valid, and a test line indicating a negative or positive depending on the device. A faint test line usually indicates a negative result at or above the cutoff: no test line indicates a presumptive positive. Staff should follow the manufacturer’s visual guide and timing strictly. Photographing results can help document ambiguous cases.

Confirmatory Testing: When And How To Send Samples

Any presumptive positive that could have employment consequences should be sent to a certified laboratory for confirmatory testing using gas chromatography–mass spectrometry (GC-MS) or liquid chromatography–tandem mass spectrometry (LC-MS/MS). It’s best practice to split or retain an aliquot during collection for immediate confirmatory shipment if required. Establish relationships with accredited labs and clarify reporting timeframes, cutoff standards, and evidence handling procedures.

Legal, Regulatory, And Privacy Considerations

Testing programs operate in a regulated and privacy-sensitive environment: mishandling can result in litigation or regulatory penalties.

Compliance With Workplace Testing Regulations

Understand federal, state, and industry-specific regulations that apply to the organization. Transportation and DOT-regulated employees face stricter protocols, specific cutoffs, and certified collector requirements. Non-DOT employers still should align policies with best practices to maintain defensibility.

Recordkeeping, Privacy, And Liability Best Practices

Limit access to test results to authorized personnel, store records securely, and retain documentation according to legal retention requirements. Clear written policies that explain testing rationale, disciplinary procedures, and the appeals process help mitigate liability. Include provisions for reasonable accommodations and medical review officers (MROs) who assess legitimate medical explanations for positive results.

Storage, Shelf Life, And Vendor Reliability

Purchasing decisions affect accuracy and supply-chain resilience.

Storage Conditions, Expiry, And Inventory Management

Store cups per manufacturer recommendations, usually at controlled room temperature away from direct sunlight. Track lot numbers and expiration dates in inventory systems and rotate stock using FIFO principles. Expired tests can degrade antibody performance and increase error rates.

Evaluating Suppliers And Quality Assurance Practices

Work with suppliers that provide lot-level COAs (Certificates of Analysis), recall notifications, and prompt customer support. Vet vendors for ISO or other quality certifications, clear warranty policies, and responsiveness to post-sale technical questions. For agencies that manage testing programs for clients, documented supplier reliability reduces operational risk and preserves client trust.

Conclusion

Accurate multi-panel drug test cups for professionals are a practical tool when used within a rigorously designed program: choose products that match regulatory requirements, incorporate integrity checks, and come from reliable vendors. Combine those choices with standardized collection procedures, trained staff, and clear confirmatory pathways to reduce false positives and legal exposure.

For agencies and businesses that support client organizations, whether staffing firms or occupational health providers, investing in the right cups and operational controls pays off in defensible screening results and smoother downstream workflows. When testing has real consequences, a presumptive result from a quality cup should be the beginning of a controlled process, not the final word.

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