(2) Urge the employee to drink up to 40 ounces of fluid, distributed reasonably through a period of up to three hours, or until the individual has provided
a sufficient urine specimen, whichever occurs first.
Not exact matches
-- If the employee ultimately fails to provide a
sufficient amount of
urine during the remaining time, the collector discontinues the collection, discards any
specimen the employee previously provided, appropriately documents the CCF, and immediately notifies the DER and the MRO — following the requirements at § 40.193 (b)(4) and (b)(5).
(i) The primary
specimen appears to have leaked out of its sealed bottle and the laboratory believes a
sufficient amount of
urine exists in the split
specimen to conduct all appropriate primary laboratory testing; or
(c) As the DER, when the collector informs you that the employee has not provided a
sufficient amount of
urine (see paragraph (b)(4) of this section), you must, after consulting with the MRO, direct the employee to obtain, within five days, an evaluation from a licensed physician, acceptable to the MRO, who has expertise in the medical issues raised by the employee's failure to provide a
sufficient specimen.
Unless the
urine is to be cultured for bacteria, there is no need to catheterize the pet — a fresh clean - catch
specimen is
sufficient.