A young woman stands in a kitchen in front of three girls of descending height. The woman is facing the camera, looking down as she holds a blue ice pop and a pair of scissors. The children are seen from behind, looking up at the woman with rapt attention.

Susan Horton cuts open ice pops for her daughters at home in Cotati, California, in July 2024. Marissa Leshnov for The Marshall Project

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Pregnant with her fifth child, Susan Horton had a lot of confidence in her parenting abilities. Then she ate a salad from Costco: an “everything” chopped salad kit with poppy seeds. When she went to the hospital to give birth the next day, she tested positive for opiates. Horton told doctors that it must have been the poppy seeds, but she couldn’t convince them it was true. She was reported to child welfare authorities, and a judge removed Horton’s newborn from her care. 

“They had a singular piece of evidence,” Horton said, “and it was wrong.”

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Hospitals across the country routinely drug test people coming in to give birth. But the tests many hospitals use are notoriously imprecise, with false positive rates of up to 50 percent for some drugs. People taking over-the-counter cold medicine or prescribed medications can test positive for methamphetamine or opiates.This week on Reveal, our collaboration with The Marshall Project investigates why parents across the country are being reported to child protective services over inaccurate drug test results. Reporter Shoshana Walter digs into the cases of women who were separated from their babies after a pee-in-a-cup drug test triggered a cascade of events they couldn’t control.

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