drug testing Australia |
Most people have taken a statistics class at some point in their
school career, but the reality is that after school the statistical
learning often stops. When drug and alcohol testing
companies like CMM Technology mention random testing, there is a good
chance many workers have forgotten what the statistical method entails.
Employers, on the other hand, understand what random testing means.
However, the ones who try to stay current on the latest research on
drugs and alcohol are bound to run into terms that have little meaning.
Understanding the basics of sampling gives employers the tools needed
to intelligently respond to staff questions, whilst recognising
commonly used research terms makes the information in written materials
easier to assimilate.
No Head Shaking
First things first: When a company says it will randomly test
employees for drugs and alcohols there are certain principles assumed to
be at work.
There is a definable method for selection of those to be testing
The selection method is objective, eliminating personal biases
There an equal probability that each person in the defined group of people
identified for testing will be selected
There is an independent chance a person will be selected
The employer will not interfere in the selection process so that it remains random
The statistical population is the group targeted for random testing.
It may be a department, the entire organisation, job titles designated
as high-risk positions, and so on. Stratified random sampling is a term
used to divide the entire population of employees into smaller groups
based on shared attributes, like high risk job duties. The smaller
groups are called strata. The random sample then draws a number of
people for testing that is proportional to the stratum’s size when
compared to the population.
Terms, Terms, and More Terms
Random sampling can actually be applied in a variety of ways. There
is random sampling, simple random sampling, cluster sampling, spatial
sampling, quota sampling, and so on. However, when employers are reading
research reports they will also run into terms like those used in this
sentence:”Respondent driven sampling, traditional snowball sampling and
street outreach methods were used to recruit heroin and amphetamine
injectors from one outer-urban and two inner-urban regions of Melbourne,
Australia.”
This is a classic example of how critical information can get lost in
a sea of words. Though the term “street outreach methods” is fairly
obvious as to what it means, the term “snowball sampling” is unfamiliar
to most. Snowball sampling is also called referral sampling or chain
sampling because it is a method for identifying program participants by
asking research participants for referrals. It is a non-probability
sampling technique and no relationship to random sampling.
Respondent-driven sampling is a statistical method for combining
snowball sampling with a mathematical model that compensates for the
non-random sampling method. These terms and more are regularly used in
articles discussing research on drug and alcohol addiction.
Understanding the terms makes the information provided intelligible.
Catching Terms
There is general agreement that workplace data collections concerning
drugs and alcohol are limited in terms of breadth and quality. It is
impossible to understand the full extent of the problem until there is
adequate data to assess. However, all the data that has been collected
to date by various agencies and organisations all bolster the belief
that workplace substance use is common, thus supporting the need for
random alcohol and drug testing.
Terms get tossed about whilst people shake their heads in agreement
as if they understand what is being discussed. They do not know what the
terms mean but are unwilling to acknowledge they do not know, or they
give up trying to stay informed. Mediscreen uses drug screening
methodologies and procedures that reflect the best information obtained
from toxicologists and industry experts. Coupled with a truly random
selection of screening subjects, employers have the assurance that the
right steps are being taken to minimise workplace drug and alcohol use.
This article has been taken from : http://www.mediscreen.net.au/what-did-the-report-say-sampling-101/
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