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Indiana State Department of Toxicology sees record 18,000 cases amid drug investigation surge

The lead off

  • Indiana State Department of Toxicology reports record workload with nearly 18,000 cases submitted last year
  • Law enforcement submissions increased 11 percent, driven by more drug-related investigations
  • Officials say operational changes have improved alcohol testing turnaround times despite backlog pressures

INDIANAPOLIS, IND. (WOWO) The Indiana State Department of Toxicology is reporting a record number of case submissions, with officials saying nearly 18,000 blood samples were analyzed last year amid a continued rise in drug-related investigations across the state.


Record case volume reported

State officials said law enforcement agencies submitted approximately 18,000 cases for analysis in the past year, marking an 11 percent increase over previous totals.

The increase is being attributed primarily to a rise in drug-related investigations, which have added to overall laboratory demand.


Staffing and workload pressures

Officials said the surge in submissions has placed added pressure on laboratory staff and resources, particularly as the agency continues to operate under budget constraints.

Despite the increased workload, the department has continued processing cases while working through an existing backlog.


Turnaround times improving for alcohol tests

State officials said organizational and operational changes have helped improve turnaround times for alcohol-related testing.

While the overall caseload has increased, the department said these adjustments have helped reduce delays in certain categories of testing.


Ongoing backlog challenges

Officials acknowledged that the lab is still managing a backlog of cases as submissions continue at elevated levels.

They said efforts are ongoing to balance new incoming cases with previously submitted samples requiring analysis.


Looking ahead

State toxicology officials said they will continue evaluating internal processes and resource allocation as they work to manage growing demand and maintain timely processing of forensic testing across Indiana.


The takeaway

Case submissions reach record levels

Indiana’s State Department of Toxicology handled nearly 18,000 cases last year, marking a significant increase driven by drug-related investigations.

Rising workload strains laboratory resources

Officials say staffing and budget pressures continue as the lab works through a growing backlog of blood sample analyses.

Efficiency improvements show early impact

Despite increased demand, state officials report improved turnaround times for alcohol testing following internal operational changes.

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