Making it more difficult to see their veins
Colored bulbs cast an
eerie blue glow in the restroom of a convenience store where people who inject
heroin and other drugs have been seeking the relative privacy of the stalls to
shoot up.
The blue lights are
meant to discourage people from using drugs in store bathrooms by making it
more difficult for them to see their veins. It's an idea that's been around for
years but is getting a fresh look as a result of the nation's opioid epidemic.
"The hardest-core
opiate user still wants to be accurate. They want to make sure the needle goes
in the right spot," said Read Hayes, a University of Florida researcher
and director of the Loss Prevention Research Council, a retail
industry-supported group that is looking at the lights' effectiveness. The
purpose of the blue light is to "disrupt that process" and force
people to go somewhere else to take drugs, he said.
Turkey Hill Minit
Markets, a 260-store chain based in Lancaster, is one of two convenience store
chains and a supermarket chain working with the loss prevention group to
field-test the blue bulbs. Hayes, whose group devises methods to combat theft
and violent crime at stores, said that the study is still in its infancy, but
that initial feedback from stores that have been using them has been positive.
Earlier studies have questioned the lights' deterrent effect, with people who use opioids telling researchers they'd shoot up in blue light if it meant avoiding withdrawal symptoms. Many public health experts oppose the practice, saying blue lights make people more likely to hurt themselves and stigmatize those in the grips of addiction.
And, for people
accustomed to injecting themselves, there are ways around the lights.
Someone in withdrawal
who obtains heroin is "going to want to use as soon as possible, even if
the location is not optimal," said Brett Wolfson-Stofko at the National
Development & Research Institutes, who has studied injection drug use in
public bathrooms.
Store owners say they have
to do something.
In Luzerne County,
where Turkey Hill has installed blue lights at a store in Wilkes-Barre, Coroner
William Lisman said people have died from overdoses in the public bathrooms of
fast-food restaurants, big-box stores and other retailers.
"It can very
easily go unnoticed until somebody else wants to use that restroom," he
said. "Other patrons realize they can't get in, the manager opens up and
we find people deceased."
At some Turkey Hill
locations in hard-hit neighbourhoods, store workers would often find used
needles or even people slumped over from an overdose, said Matt Dorgan, the
chain's asset protection manager.
"We realized we
need to do something to protect our associates and our customers," he
said.
The blue lights were
part of a broader set of security measures at Turkey Hill that included
brighter exterior lighting, new window signage to make store exteriors more
visible from inside, and security training for store workers.
More than six months
after the chain began using the blue lights in as many as 20 stores,
"we're not finding hardly anything anymore," Dorgan said. "It's
a pretty dramatic reduction. We haven't had a single overdose."
Last fall, Sheetz, a
convenience-store chain with more than 500 stores in six states, installed a
new lighting system in the restroom of its New Kensington store, about 20 miles
outside Pittsburgh. The blue lights are "designed to help our customers
and employees avoid dangerous situations," said company spokesman Nick
Ruffner.
Sheetz, he said, has
seen "positive steps in the right direction," and has since installed
the blue bulbs at a store in Huntington, West Virginia.
Some health experts
encourage interventions that don't involve blue lights. Installation of needle disposal containers
can help protect store employees, the public and people who use drugs, while
stall doors that swing outward can make it easier to reach someone who has
overdosed and is in need of medical help.
Stores can also work
with law enforcement, social service agencies and addiction services to tackle
the problem — a step that Hayes, at the loss prevention council, said retailers
are looking to take.
Retailers aren't the
only ones experimenting with blue lights.
The city of
Philadelphia began distributing kits to residents that include a blue bulb for
the front porch, no-trespassing signs, a tool to pick up used syringes, a
needle disposal box and contact information for social services.
The city — where
overdose deaths, fueled by the powerful synthetic opioid fentanyl, surged more
than 30 per cent to 1,200 last year — has given out more than 100 kits since
January.
Nothing new here. They have been doing this in Vancouver for many years already as Im sure Canadiana is aware of..
ReplyDeleteseems like a good idea
ReplyDeletea junkie is gonna find a way to get their fix regardless even if it means shooting up in the dark
ReplyDeleteTrue, and you can still find a vein, just not as easily. The blood from the vein still shows as a different shade of color when the needle is pulled back, as long as the hit isn't too dark and concentrated... The blue lights are "designed to help our customers and employees avoid dangerous situations," OK, sure like, please go and die somewhere else, sir / madam why not try MacDonald's on the corner their toilets are better suited for overdoses? Why bother.
Delete8:50 you better bother, that "junkie" could be your son or daughter, brother, sister or the love of your life...
DeleteHalf of people using now smoke it, so that won’t do anything for peeps who chase the dragon, still od’s
DeleteHad those in some places here in Australia for many years.
ReplyDeleteI respect them trying to do something. Unfortunately the only thing this is going to do is ease the minds of non addicts. A junkie is still going to find a way to hit a vein.
ReplyDeletePhelpso
I agree 100%
DeleteAs ex-user I can tell those lights don't do shit. For some it makes it harder but that's a little minority.
True, I had used for years and we usually hit in the same spots which have developed a sort of butterfly where the vein is from hitting there so much that you can hit the vein with your eyes closed, no joke I once hit in the almost dark.
DeleteYeah i used for years as well. Always had a good job and made enough money to support a 1-2g/day habit. So i never had to spike a vein. However, the vast majority of addicts i know did, and it was scary how "crafty" some of them were.
DeletePhelpso
Thanks canadia. Always like your comments and
ReplyDeleteContributions to the site
Law of the jungle baby! Welcome to the jungle!
ReplyDeleteLet them enjoy their drugs. Poor guys
ReplyDeleteNothing a blanket and a flashlight cant fix
ReplyDeleteAfter the first few dead yunkies, they just locked the door and you must ask for the "keys". Its like die somewhere else but not here.
ReplyDeleteBut Times have changed and the fools stopped OD themselfs
They had there 10 years ago in van,, nothing changes
ReplyDelete