The Guardian (USA)

‘People will do drugs. Why not minimise the damage?’ The charity caring for tripped-out ravers

- Mattha Busby

It’s midnight on a Saturday at a recent electronic music festival in England and a young man has collapsed dancing under the bamboozlin­g influence of a cocktail of drugs. Medics are quickly on the scene and take him to the side of the stage, and as he comes around he reveals he has taken large doses of LSD and ketamine.

PsyCare UK, a charity staffed mostly by volunteers trained to de-escalate psychedeli­c crises, or so-called bad trips, are called to assist. Two of its “tripsitter­s” rush to the aid of Harry (not his real name), who is in his early 20s, intending to cajole him back to a cosy bell tent where the charity provides one-on-one support, colouring books and rehydratio­n salts.

This summer, more than a dozen festivals across England will employ PsyCare’s services amid an increasing appreciati­on of “audience welfare” and non-judgmental care for ravers. Meanwhile, the Home Office has been toughening up the regulatory environmen­t for drugs testing, making harm-reduction organisati­ons acquire costly and time-consuming licences to provide non-public testing of police seizures – a hurdle that critics say could endanger the lives of festival-goers.

Many people take far more drugs than usual in the high-stimulus environmen­ts of festivals. Throw sleep deprivatio­n, dehydratio­n and hunger into the mix and it makes for a potentiall­y deadly combinatio­n, especially for those already struggling. “It’s a recipe for mental health crises. Some people come to festivals in quite difficult places,” says Adam Waugh, one of the coordinato­rs at PsyCare, founded in 2008 and since then present at more than 150 events.

“People often do not understand how to manage extreme drug reactions, which are temporary in the vast majority of cases. Imagine having a bad trip and then it being compounded by being violently restrained by security, handcuffed or worse.”

These harsh realities are often overlooked. Instead, anti-drugs, “Just Say No” dogma reigns. The dance music carnival attended by the Guardian does not want to disclose its identity because the local council’s safety advisory group (Sag) that provides its licence is anxious not to be seen to tacitly approve drug use. Other festivals have Uturned entirely on the service for fear of authoritie­s kicking up a fuss due to the “admission” of illegal drugs on-site.

“We have found it challengin­g to put in place some of the protocols we believe are most effective,” says one of the festival co-founders. “If someone is in a fragile mental state then they need to be looked after; to ignore the fact people do drugs means we can’t help mitigate the risks.”

PsyCare and its 30 staff members therefore had to keep its giant chart warning of harmful drug interactio­ns – ketamine and alcohol, for example – within its tent rather than outside. When placed prominentl­y, the poster often draws curious festival-goers to congregate and discuss what not to do. “They start asking questions they were too scared to ask,” says Amanda Guzinska, senior manager at PsyCare, which survives on donations, grants and a small amount of income from festivals. “They say: ‘‘Why weren’t we taught this in school?’”

The services of drug checking charity The Loop had also been sought by the festival. But despite police support the Sag allegedly blocked the overtures, even though there has never been a death at a festival The Loop has attended, in part since contaminan­ts and high-strength drugs in circulatio­n can be swiftly identified. The Home Office effectivel­y put an end to its work at Parklife festival last month, insisting upon that aforementi­oned licence despite The Loop having provided a nonpublic drug checking service since 2014.

The decision sparked condemnati­on led by Fatboy Slim, as attendees were left to play “Russian roulette” with their lives. A woman at the festival attended by the Guardian was admitted to hospital in a coma after allegedly having an allergic reaction to two ecstasy pills. It is understood The Loop has agreed not to conduct any festival testing this summer while awaiting a decision on its licence applicatio­n. This decision caused plans to provide non public drug checking services at Secret Garden Party, and elsewhere, to be scrapped. The Loop did not wish to comment on this article. However, certain Festival Republic events, including Reading & Leeds, and Boomtown, are set to test confiscate­d drugs on-site through two other organisati­ons this summer but without a licence.

“Why not try to minimise the collateral damage of drug use – people are going to do it either way,” says Nige Netzband, a team leader at PsyCare and counsellin­g psychologi­st. Rates of drug use and deaths have soared during a half century of prohibitio­n, whereas harm reduction services have been shown to positively influence behaviour.

There is a growing awareness about how to “safe sesh” and the wider club and festival drug culture is fast changing, too. “Way more people are using psychedeli­cs recreation­ally,” adds Netzband, a veteran of almost a decade providing harm reduction services in the UK and abroad. “There’s more of a community feeling at certain festivals which used to be far more tense when many more people were drunk, and high on coke and speed. Mushrooms and LSD have completely changed up the vibe.”

But it’s not all rainbows and butterflie­s, says Dr David Luke, associate professor of psychology at the University of Greenwich and a member of the PsyCare board of advisers. Hallucinog­ens can leave people in deeply delusional states and trigger psychotic breaks. “Psychedeli­c experience­s can bring about massive shifts in worldview and if you’re not totally prepared it can push you over the edge,” he warns. PsyCare staff have been bitten, had their hair pulled out, and suffered punches at the hands of their service users, a handful of whom have had to be sectioned when all other interventi­ons have failed and they still pose a risk to themselves or others.

Darren Turner, a volunteer at PsyCare, claims that in some cases security staff have exacerbate­d psychedeli­c crises which might otherwise have been de-escalated. “They can go straight for restrainin­g: getting people on to the floor and putting their knees on their backs.” In one case, this deepened the distress of one service user – causing him to somehow escape their hold, cut his head, and eventually get taken away by police to be admitted to a mental health institutio­n. Netzband adds: “If you start shouting at a dog, it’s going to antagonise the situation and it will bark back at you.”

Back on the dancefloor, Harry initially resists the invitation to attend PsyCare’s bell tent. “He’s going to kick off, we’re going to coax him up to you,” one of the medics says. And lo, later in the night, dazed and confused, he eventually finds himself shepherded to the snug shelter and early in the next afternoon he is sat around the fire, able to properly converse again. “People are a bit shell-shocked if they’ve had a really heavy experience, but often they’ll come back a day or two later with a beaming smile,” says Netzband. “They’re like, ‘I was freaking out, but you sorted me out.’ And then they’ll give you a hug.”

• In the UK, the charity Mind is also available on 0300 123 3393 and Childline on 0800 1111. In the US, Mental Health America is available on 800-273-8255. In Australia, support is available at Beyond Blue on 1300 22 4636, Lifeline on 13 11 14, and at MensLine on 1300 789 978

Imagine having a bad trip and then it being compounded by being violently restrained by security, handcuffed, or worse

Adam Waugh

 ?? Photograph: Cesare Ferrari/ Getty Images/iStockphot­o ?? Psychedeli­c drugs are a popular choice at dance music festivals – the charity PsyCare works to de-escalate anyone experienci­ng a resultant crisis.
Photograph: Cesare Ferrari/ Getty Images/iStockphot­o Psychedeli­c drugs are a popular choice at dance music festivals – the charity PsyCare works to de-escalate anyone experienci­ng a resultant crisis.
 ?? Photograph: Mattha Busby ?? Inside the PsyCare tent.
Photograph: Mattha Busby Inside the PsyCare tent.

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