Since 1986, when America's current perception of a drug abuse
crisis in the workplace began, many challenges and potential
solutions have been identified. As we enter the 1990s, real
progress in awareness and action has been made in many public and
private American workplaces. However, the most important
accomplishment--actual reduction in the number of persons using
drugs in the workforce--is considerably more difficult to achieve.
Research is being conducted in a number of employment settings to
document how this can be done. While the results to date are
encouraging, it is also clear that much remains to be done.
Evidence from the national research reported in this book shows
that many organizations regard their achievements on this front as
modest at best, even though they have installed systematic programs
aimed at reducing the problems of worker drug abuse.
The organizational change approach required to achieve drug-free
workplaces is the main subject of this book. Based upon findings
from a three-year national research study, Thomas Backer and Kirk
O'Hara examine what has been done to combat drug abuse in the
workplace. They place the results of their inquiry within the
larger context of organizational change theory. The critical
secondary issues of responses to AIDS in the workplace and
containing employer health care costs through managed care are also
addressed. This book's focus on programmatic responses to workplace
drug abuse at the day-to-day implementation level will be welcomed
by substance abuse professionals, designers and directors of
employee assistance programs, human resources and benefits
professionals, and managers concerned about substance abuse in the
workplace.
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