Vancouver nightclubs: an overdose minefield lies in wait - Action News
Home WebMail Tuesday, November 26, 2024, 06:00 AM | Calgary | -16.5°C | Regions Advertise Login | Our platform is in maintenance mode. Some URLs may not be available. |
British ColumbiaAnalysis

Vancouver nightclubs: an overdose minefield lies in wait

While some clubs have taken progressive steps to protect casual drug users, denial, stigma and fear of liability mean no cohesive harm reduction framework is in place. Meanwhile, governments show no signs of regulating harm reduction on the nightlife scene.

Patchwork harm reduction approach could leave Vancouver club goers at risk

Some nightclubs have purchased naloxone kits to keep their patrons safe from potential overdoses but many have not. (Yoshikazu Tsuno/AFP/Getty Images)

Whether nightclubs like it or not, illegal drug use is a veryreal part of the nightlife scene in Vancouver. And as the overdose crisis continues in Vancouverand across the province, itmeans there's a chance thedrugs being used in nightclubs couldbe deadly.

The overdose crisis has taken more than 1,000 lives since January of last year, and while there are no confirmedopioidoverdose deaths in clubs so far, the B.C. Coroners Service says it is investigating at least one suspected overdose death in a Vancouver club.

The reality is there could be more.

According to the latest numbers from the coroners service, cocaine was the most common drugto accompany opioids in people who died from illicit drug overdoses between 2012 and October of last year.

So, if fentanylor carfentanilor W-18 can be present in almost any street drug, it means casual drug use inside of clubs could be a dangerous proposition.

Some nightclubs have taken proactive steps to keep their patrons safe from potential overdoses by purchasing naloxone kits and training their staff to use them, but those pockets of harm reduction seem to be oases in a desert of denial, stigma and fear of liability.

Too many clubs refuse to act.

At a time whennaloxonekits are available in high schools in some B.C. school districts, pharmacies and funeral homes, it seems puzzling there is no consistent approach to harm reduction on the nightlife scene.

And so far, governments and industry associations have done littleabout it.

Participants at a special overdose workshop organized by a Vancouver DJ and put on for people attending night clubs or underground parties practise preparing a naloxone antidote. (Cliff Shim/CBC)

Stigma and Denial

Munroe Craig is an addiction expert and owner of Karmik, a nightlife and event harm reduction organization contracted by promoters to set up sanctuary spaces at events.

"The people that are considering this something that's not happening, or they don't believe this is happening in their space, they're misinformed and they're wrong," she said.

"We've responded actively to situations that could have been fentanyl overdoses. Thankfully they weren't."

Some club purveyors simply don't see supplying naloxone kits or other harm reduction services as part of their purview. Tania Richards, the director of sales and marketing for the Granville Entertainment Group, which owns The Roxy, Doolin's Pub and others, says it's neither her company's responsibility, nor within its area of expertise.

"The simple answer is no we don't. We are not trained or authorized to administer this medication. We have strict protocols and guidelines given to us by the industry and our insurance coverage," she said.

"Currently, our protocols are to call Emergency Health Services and/or 911 in case of medical emergencies as no authority has mandated we are even allowed to do this."

First responders work to revive an overdose victim in Vancouver. (CBC)

And it's not only a lack of action atthe club level.

Industry association Barwatchrepresents about 35 venues in the city and was originally formedto help fightgang activity. It has sinceexpanded its focus to include sexualharassment, sexual assaultand harm reduction.

Curtis Robinsonis the chair ofBarwatchand a former Vancouver police officer. HesaidBarwatchhas sponsoredan information campaign on the overdose crisis, andwhile some members have taken steps on their own,it has not considered an overarching policy fornaloxonekits or other harm reduction.

But that doesn't mean he's not open to it.

"This fentanyl thing is brand new to the conversation and we haven't been asked to do [harm reduction] yet ... but I'm sure we can probably put that on the agenda for discussion," Robinson said.

Calls for government action

Both the City of Vancouver and the province issue licences for liquor serving establishments, but so far, there is nothing in thatprocess requiringclubs to have naloxone kits and trained personnel on hand. Craig would like to see the city add something to its licensing process.

For Paul Stoilen, operating partner with theDonnellyGroup, in charge of Republic and Bar None nightclubs, the idea of including harm reductionin the province'sServing It Right training would be an easy starting point.

"It's now part of society, unfortunately, so I think this kind of training could easily be implemented into some liquor control board requirements for Serving It Right," he said.

"If you're serving alcohol, there's things that they train us to look out for and this could easily be added to that."

Whilegovernment regulation on harm reduction seems like a pragmatic step for the nightlife scene, there's no sign of any movement on that front.

The City of Vancouver won't say if harmreduction will be part of its updated liquor licensing policies this spring, and on the provincial level, there's nothing in the current licensing legislation about illicit drug harm reduction.

When asked if it had any such plans for nightclubs, the ministry responsible for liquor distributiondidn`t directly address the question but issued the followingstatement instead:

"The province does not require liquor licensed establishments to have overdose harm reductions processes or have their staff trained on administering treatment for overdoses."

Even if changes are made, advocates say regulators have been too slow off the mark, dragging their feet nearly a year into a provincial health emergency.

Without leadership on harm reduction from governments and professional associations, it appears as though pubs and clubswillhave to act independently on theissue.

And for casual drug users not fully aware of the consequences of their actions in the context of an overdose crisis, the lack of a harm reduction plan could,create a life or death situation on the nightclub dance floor.