We conducted an empirical test of the assertion that absenteeism related to substance abuse and dependence among workers is an important contributor to the cost of doing business among American companies, a cost sufficient to motivate firms to aggressively intervene to eliminate abuse and dependence among their employees. The results of this analysis, based on relevant national data sets, suggest that such abuse-based absenteeism is, at best, an incidental cost to business and is insufficient to justify significant prophylactic or therapeutic investments of scarce human resource dollars to achieve an abuse and dependence free workplace. These findings force both public and private sector policymakers to turn to a "hazardous use''/"critical incident'' rational as the basis of their argument that American business should invest human resource dollars in specific programs and technologies designed to achieve a drug-free workplace. (c) 2005 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.
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Dept. of Hlth. Admin. and Policy, College of Public Health, P.O.Box 26901, Oklahoma City, O.Dept. of Hlth. Admin. and Policy, College of Public Health, P.O.Box 26901, Oklahoma City, O.
Broyles R.W.
Narine L.
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MHA Prog. the Univ. of N. Carolina, CharlotteDept. of Hlth. Admin. and Policy, College of Public Health, P.O.Box 26901, Oklahoma City, O.
Narine L.
Robertson M.J.
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University of Oklahoma, Oklahoma CityDept. of Hlth. Admin. and Policy, College of Public Health, P.O.Box 26901, Oklahoma City, O.