A major oil company in the Baltic states says it is installing blue lights in its gas station toilettes to dissuade growing numbers of drug addicts from using the facilities to inject narcotics.
Published:
5 February 2001 y., Monday
The Norwegian-owned Statoil, a leading gasoline distributor in the region, said intravenous drug users had difficulty finding veins under the low, bluish light and so began avoiding places with such specially fitted bulbs. Before they restored independence in 1991, narcotics use in the Baltic states was rare. But as Estonia, Latvia and Lithuania have opened up to the rest of the world, illegal drug use has risen sharply.
Statoil said the problem was dramatically highlighted when an employee at a gas station in Latvia recently pricked herself with a needle that had been discarded in the bathroom. It was found to be infected with the HIV virus that causes AIDS. Statoil has some 90 stations across the region, but only those near large cities, where narcotics use is more common, were putting up the blue lights. Several outlets already installed the lights and others will do so soon. Spokesmen for the oil company said some Western European nations have already put blue lights in airport bathrooms and at other public places. They said the scheme had already proven effective at dissuading addicts.
Šaltinis:
The Weekly Crier
Copying, publishing, announcing any information from the News.lt portal without written permission of News.lt editorial office is prohibited.
The most popular articles
Plans to coordinate research across Europe on neurodegenerative diseases such as Alzheimer’s and Parkinson’s received strong backing from the European Parliament in a resolution adopted on Thursday.
more »
The WHO team of experts has continued its work in Ukraine over the weekend. While four members continued investigations in Lviv – one of the most affected regions in the country – two others travelled 100 km west of the capital, Kyiv, to Zhytomyr: a medium-sized city and a regional (oblast) capital.
more »
On Wednesday, 4 November 2009, five members of the WHO mission in Ukraine arrived in Lviv, in the western part of the country. Lviv is one of the most affected regions, with more than 100 000 people reportedly sick with influenza-like illness.
more »
The Strategic Advisory Group of Experts (SAGE) on Immunization, which advises WHO on policies and strategies for vaccines and immunization, devoted a session of its 27–29 October meeting to pandemic influenza vaccines.
more »
On 28 October 2009, the Ministry of Health of the Ukraine informed WHO, through its Country Office in Ukraine, about an unusually high level of activity of acute respiratory illness in the western part of the country, associated with an increased number of hospital admissions and fatalities.
more »
The WHO Health in Prisons Project (HIPP) arose in 1995 because of the recognition of the gap between public health and prison health.
more »
The International Day for Disaster Reduction (IDDR) is celebrated every year on 14 October.
more »
On 12 October the EU’s health ministers met in Luxembourg for an extra Council meeting to discuss the new influenza (H1N1).
more »
The European Commission can confirm that on 6 October Commission officials started surprise inspections at the premises of certain companies active in the pharmaceutical industry.
more »
Addressing health experts from throughout the WHO European Region at the 12th European Health Forum Gastein Dr Nata Menabde, Deputy Regional Director at WHO/Europe, explained that the values and commitments in the Tallinn Charter: Health Systems for Health and Wealth are more relevant than ever.
more »