News (Media Awareness Project) - US KS: Jury Finds Lenexa Lab Negligent In Drug-Test Suit |
Title: | US KS: Jury Finds Lenexa Lab Negligent In Drug-Test Suit |
Published On: | 2001-07-07 |
Source: | Topeka Capital-Journal (KS) |
Fetched On: | 2008-01-25 14:52:49 |
JURY FINDS LENEXA LAB NEGLIGENT IN DRUG-TEST SUIT
PORTLAND, Ore. -- A jury awarded a fired flight attendant $400,000 from the
drug-testing laboratory that incorrectly determined she had cheated on a
drug test.
Yasuko Ishikawa, 40, was fired by Delta Air Lines in 1999 after a routine
drug test showed her urine sample had been tampered with. The test looks
for creatinine, a metabolite found in human urine; if a sample has too
little creatinine, then it is deemed to be a substitution or watered down.
Ishikawa insisted she never took drugs and didn't alter the sample. A
separate test showed it was valid and no drugs were present.
On Tuesday, a Portland jury found Lenexa, Kan.-based Lab One was negligent
in conducting the validity test.
Federal law requires that millions of transportation workers be tested each
year in the name of public safety.
Last year, a review by the Department of Health and Human Services found
some labs hadn't followed government standards in conducting the validity
tests. The government ordered the results of Ishikawa's test and 82 others
that Lab One conducted, about 300 in all, be thrown out.
Delta has offered to reinstate employees dismissed because of faulty tests;
Ishikawa has been back on the job since June 1.
PORTLAND, Ore. -- A jury awarded a fired flight attendant $400,000 from the
drug-testing laboratory that incorrectly determined she had cheated on a
drug test.
Yasuko Ishikawa, 40, was fired by Delta Air Lines in 1999 after a routine
drug test showed her urine sample had been tampered with. The test looks
for creatinine, a metabolite found in human urine; if a sample has too
little creatinine, then it is deemed to be a substitution or watered down.
Ishikawa insisted she never took drugs and didn't alter the sample. A
separate test showed it was valid and no drugs were present.
On Tuesday, a Portland jury found Lenexa, Kan.-based Lab One was negligent
in conducting the validity test.
Federal law requires that millions of transportation workers be tested each
year in the name of public safety.
Last year, a review by the Department of Health and Human Services found
some labs hadn't followed government standards in conducting the validity
tests. The government ordered the results of Ishikawa's test and 82 others
that Lab One conducted, about 300 in all, be thrown out.
Delta has offered to reinstate employees dismissed because of faulty tests;
Ishikawa has been back on the job since June 1.
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