An official website of the United States government Here's how you know

DOD implements expanded drug testing for military applicants

By Lisa Ferdinando, DoD News, Defense Media ActivityMarch 10, 2017

DOD implements expanded drug testing for military applicants
(Photo Credit: U.S. Army) VIEW ORIGINAL

WASHINGTON -- Drug testing for all applicants for military service is expanding to include the same 26-drug panel used for active military members, the Defense Department's director of drug testing and program policy said.

The change, effective April 3, is due to the level of illicit and prescription medication abuse among civilians, as well as the increase in heroin and synthetic drug use within the civilian population, Army Col. Tom Martin explained.

Currently, military applicants are tested for marijuana; cocaine; amphetamines, including methamphetamine; and designer amphetamines such as MDMA -- also known as "Molly" or "Ecstasy" -- and MDA, also known as "Adam," he said.

The expanded testing will include those drugs as well as heroin, codeine, morphine, hydrocodone, oxycodone, hydromorphone, oxymorphone, and a number of synthetic cannabinoids and benzodiazepine sedatives, Martin said.

The new standards apply to all military applicants, including recruits entering through military entrance processing stations, as well as appointees to the service academies, incoming members of the ROTC, and officer candidates undergoing initial training in an enlisted status.

ENSURING THE BEST ENTER THE MILITARY

With drug use incompatible with military service, the expanded testing is meant to ensure only the most qualified people are admitted, Martin said. Incoming service members will be held to the same standards as current military members, who are subject to random drug testing up to three times a year.

"Military applicants currently are tested on a small subset of drugs that military members are tested on," Martin said. "Applicants need to be aware of the standard we hold our service members to when they join the service."

About 279,400 applicants are processed for entry into military service each year, with roughly 2,400 of them testing positive for drugs, Martin said. Data indicates that about 450 additional people will test positive using the expanded testing, he said.

POLICY DETAILS

The updated policy allows applicants who test positive to reapply after 90 days, if the particular service allows it, Martin said. Individuals who test positive on the second test will be permanently disqualified from military service, he said, but he noted that the services have the discretion to apply stricter measures and can disqualify someone after one positive test.

Current policy allows for different standards for reapplication depending on the type of drug, Martin said. The updated policy is universal and allows only one opportunity to reapply for military service regardless of drug type, he said.

The update to Department of Defense Instruction 1010.16 was published Feb. 27.

(Follow Lisa Ferdinando on Twitter: @FerdinandoDoD)

Related Links:

Army.mil: North America News