DOT PHYSICAL questions. No answers

Discussion in 'Trucking Industry Regulations' started by KORTNEYLEE, Jan 4, 2018.

  1. KORTNEYLEE

    KORTNEYLEE Bobtail Member

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    Hello, I am trying to get my CDL. I am now trying to get my permit. November 28, 2017 I went to get my DOT PHYSICAL done. After completing my PHYSICAL I was told by MEDICAL examiner that I was disqualified because I had just started the medication chantix. I stopped taking the chantix that day. MEDICAL examiner was not able to answer my questions. Is there a time limit to when I can go back to get my PHYSICAL done again? Do I have to go back to that same examiner? What do I need to do to be able to get this physical out of the way so I can get my permit so I can start driving?? Please help. Thank you
     
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  3. Chinatown

    Chinatown Road Train Member

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    @Mark Kling probably has the most accurate advice on this.
    [​IMG]
     
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  4. bubba mark

    bubba mark Medium Load Member

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    Go to a different doc. You should be fine now.
     
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  5. x1Heavy

    x1Heavy Road Train Member

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    Chantix was on the FMCSA for a while. It is not specifically a controlled substance, but it will cause problems and the Doctor has the discretion to decide if this will cause problems.

    Since you say you are not taking it, go find another doc and try exam again. This time shut up about Chantix because you aint on it.

    Remember a DOT med exam uses everything that comes out of your mouth against you if possible.

    FMCSA Warns About Anti-Smoking Drug Chantix
     
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  6. mtoo

    mtoo Road Train Member

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    In this industry, everything you say can and will be used against you. Treat everyone as if they are an IRS agent and you are under audit. No one is looking out for you except you.
     
  7. Mark Kling

    Mark Kling Technology Contributor

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    FMCSA Expands Its Drug Testing Panel Effective January 1, 2018

    Friday, November 10, 2017
    The U.S. Department of Transportation’s Federal Motor Carrier Safety Administration announced in a rule to be published in the Federal Register on November 13, 2017, that it will expand its drug testing panel to include four synthetic opioid drugs: hydrocodone, hydromorphone, oxycodone and oxymorphone. In addition, FMCSA will add methylenedioxyamphetamine (MDA) as an initial test analyte, and remove methylenedioxyethylamphetamine (MDEA) as a confirmatory test analyte. These changes are being made to harmonize FMCSA’s drug testing regulations with recent changes to the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services’ Mandatory Guidelines for Federal Workplace Drug Testing Programs. The changes to FMCSA’s rules take effect on January 1, 2018.

    The addition of the synthetic opioid drugs is intended to address the nationwide epidemic of prescription painkiller abuse. Hydrocodone, hydromorphone, oxycodone and oxymorphone are Schedule II controlled substances and are more commonly known as Vicodin, OxyContin, Lortab, Norco, and Dilaudid, among others. FMCSA still refers to its drug testing panel as a 5-panel, but “opiates” is being changed to “opioids” and now will include these four synthetic substances in addition to heroin, morphine and codeine.

    FMCSA’s new rules also make certain technical amendments, clarify certain definitions and remove the requirement for employers and Consortium/Third Party Administrators to submit blind specimens.

    FMCSA-regulated employers should revise their drug and alcohol testing policies to conform to the regulations that are effective on January 1, 2018.
     
  8. Mark Kling

    Mark Kling Technology Contributor

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    FMCSA Warns About Anti-Smoking Drug Chantix
    Says Its Use Can Impair the Ability to Drive
    By Eric Miller, Staff Reporter

    This story appears in the June 2 print edition of Transport Topics. Click here to subscribe today.

    The Federal Motor Carrier Safety Administration has issued an advisory warning that the popular prescription smoking-cessation drug Chantix may adversely affect commercial drivers’ ability to operate their vehicles safely.

    “While we do not name any medications, such as Chantix, in FMCSA regulations, it appears that medical examiners should not certify a driver taking Chantix because the medication may adversely affect the driver’s ability to safely operate a commercial motor vehicle,” FMCSA said in a May 23 statement.

    FMCSA said its rules defer to physicians and health-care professionals to determine drivers’ medical fitness for duty.

    However, the agency cautioned that it issued the advisory because the drug has “actual and potential side effects that could impact safe driving.”

    Neither FMCSA nor Pfizer Inc., the manufacturer of Chantix, commented beyond their written statements.

    Dave Osiecki, vice president of safety, security and operations for American Trucking Associations, called the FMCSA advisory “not unprecedented but fairly unusual.”

    “FMCSA rarely takes a definitive action where they put out advisories that are fairly definitive in terms of guidance to the medical examiners,” Osiecki said. “It’s a gray area and an area they leave up to the medical examiners.”

    Osiecki said the advisory would be helpful to carriers because they can relay it to their in-house or contracted medical personnel and drivers.

    Concerns about Chantix, the product name for the drug varenicline, first became public earlier this year when a Food and Drug Administration bulletin requested it carry a warning on its label because the drug reportedly was causing severe changes in mood and behavior.

    In a subsequent advisory on May 16, FDA said after a review of the data, it had become increasingly convinced the drug had serious side effects.

    Besides mood and behavioral changes, FDA said Chantix may cause worsening of a current psychiatric illness, even if a patient’s illness is currently under control, and may cause an old psychiatric illness to reoccur.

    Other symptoms associated with the drug may include anxiety, nervousness, tension, depressed mood, unusual behaviors and thinking about or attempting suicide, FDA said.

    “While Chantix has demonstrated clear evidence of efficacy, it is important to consider these safety concerns and alert patients that they are possible,” the FDA bulletin said.

    As a result, the Federal Aviation Administration on May 23 issued a ban on use of the drug by air controllers and pilots.

    That prohibition followed a study of the drug by the medical drug-safety nonprofit group, the Institute for Safe Medication Practices, Huntingdon Valley, Pa.

    “We have immediate safety concerns about the use of varenicline among persons operating aircraft, trains, buses and other vehicles, or in other settings where a lapse in alertness or motor control could lead to massive, serious injury,” the study concluded.

    The study said that from May 2006 through December 2007, the FDA had received 227 domestic reports of suicidal acts, thoughts or behaviors, 397 cases of possible psychosis and 525 reports of hostility or aggression. These totals included 28 cases of suicide and 41 mentions of homicidal ideation, 60 cases of paranoia and 55 cases of hallucination. The categories were not mutually exclusive.

    Chantix, which first hit the market in 2006, has been a best-seller for Pfizer. In 2007, Chantix revenues were $883 million, compared with $101 million in 2006, the company said in its financial statements.

    Sales of the drug during the first three months of 2008 totaled $277 million, up 71% compared with the first quarter of 2007.

    The drug acts at sites in the brain affected by nicotine and may help those who wish to stop smoking by providing some nicotine effects to ease the withdrawal symptoms and by blocking the effects of nicotine from cigarettes if users resume smoking, FDA said.

    The company has said in written documents that in controlled clinical trials of more than 5,000 patients treated with Chantix, changes in behavior, agitation, depressed mood, suicidal ideation and suicidal behavior occurred at a rate comparable to placebo-treated patients.
     
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  9. Justrucking2

    Justrucking2 Road Train Member

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    Never admit to anything. Go find another doctor.
     
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  10. Justrucking2

    Justrucking2 Road Train Member

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    I tried that stuff once, drove me looney tunes! I went from laid back to an all out brawler, I through that crap in the trash. Totally changed my personality, and the nightmares when sleeping. Nasty stuff, I would not recommend.
     
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