Regulations of Connecticut State Agencies (Last Updated: June 14,2023) |
Title15 Navigation and Aeronautics |
SubTitle15-140r-1_15-140r-10. Forensic Chemical Testing Under an Act Concerning Boating Safety |
Sec.15-140r-9. Requirements for the conduct of the analysis of blood and urine
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(a) Requirements for blood collection
(1) Blood shall be withdrawn as provided in section 15-140r(a)(3) of the Connecticut General Statutes.
(2) Blood samples shall be collected using a sterile syringe and hypodermic needle or other equipment of equivalent sterility. The skin at the area of puncture shall be thoroughly cleansed and disinfected, provided that any solution containing ethyl alcohol shall not be used as a skin antiseptic.
(3) Containers and other equipment for sample collection shall be of a type that will preserve the integrity and suitability of the sample from the time of collection until analysis. Following collection, the container for each sample shall be sealed and labeled. Only those samples that have been properly sealed shall be analyzed.
(b) Requirements for urine collection
(1) The peace officer collecting the sample shall monitor the collection of the sample to ensure that adulteration or misidentification does not occur. Collections shall be monitored by a peace officer of the same gender as the individual from whom the sample is obtained.
(2) Containers and other equipment for sample collection shall be of a type that will preserve the integrity and suitability of the sample from the time of collection until it is analyzed. Following collection, the container for each sample shall be sealed and labeled. Only those samples that have been properly sealed shall be analyzed.
(c) Requirements for blood and urine tests
(1) No analysis may be reported or used for the purposes specified in section 15-140r-2 of the Regulations of Connecticut State Agencies, unless the method or methods used to conduct the analysis have been approved by the commissioner and such analysis is performed by an analyst.
(2) In conducting the analysis, the analyst shall use standards and controls approved by the commissioner.
(3) All analyses shall be performed in duplicate. Alcohol test results shall be reported to the requesting agency only when the duplicate results correspond to each other within 5 percent of the mean value. Drug test results shall be reported to the requesting agency only when the duplicate results correspond to each other within 20 percent of the mean value.
(4) All reports, written and oral, shall indicate the determined or equivalent blood alcohol content in terms of hundredths of a percent. When determinations are made to the nearest thousandth of a percent, results shall be truncated to the first two digits after the decimal point. For example, a determination of 0.149 percent shall be reported as 0.14 percent.
(Adopted effective August 30, 2005)