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Arrestee Drug Abuse Monitoring

Arrestee Drug Abuse Monitoring, or ADAM, was a survey conducted by the United States Department of Justice from 1997-2003 and by the Office of national Drug Control Policy as ADAM II from 2007-20014 to gauge the prevalence of illegal drug use among arrestees and to track changes in patterns of drug use an availability across regions of the country. It was a reformulation of the prior Drug Use Forecasting (DUF) program, which focused on five drugs in particular: cocaine, marijuana, methamphetamine,opiates, and Phencyclidine|PCP. AS ADAM it included tests for 9 drugs and self report of a long last of others. Arrestee Drug Abuse Monitoring, or ADAM, was a survey conducted by the United States Department of Justice from 1997-2003 and by the Office of national Drug Control Policy as ADAM II from 2007-20014 to gauge the prevalence of illegal drug use among arrestees and to track changes in patterns of drug use an availability across regions of the country. It was a reformulation of the prior Drug Use Forecasting (DUF) program, which focused on five drugs in particular: cocaine, marijuana, methamphetamine,opiates, and Phencyclidine|PCP. AS ADAM it included tests for 9 drugs and self report of a long last of others.

[ "Substance abuse", "Urinalysis", "Drug", "illicit drug" ]
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