Plaintiffs William Alan Russell and Mark E. Garriott were incarcerated in the Johnson County, Indiana, jail in 2001. They filed this suit pursuant to 42 U.S.C. § 1983 against then-Sheriff J.D. Richards, contending that the jail’s policy of directing incoming inmates to use a delousing shampoo violated their Fourteenth Amendment due process right to be free from unwanted medical treatment. The district court entered summary judgment in favor of Richards. We affirm.
I.
Russell and Garriot were arrested on separate occasions in 2001 for minor, nonviolent offenses and were taken to the Johnson County jail. On arrival at the jail, they were subject to the jail’s debus-ing policy, which we describe below. The record does not reveal the date that the jail implemented this policy, but according to Richards’ witnesses, the policy has been in place for a number of years.
Before entering the general population of the Johnson County jail, each incoming inmate is handed a small cup of Liceall brand debusing shampoo and is told to apply it to his scalp and rinse it out while showering. No one at the jail monitors the inmate to verify that he has used the shampoo as instructed, however. In fact, as far as the jail is concerned, any inmate may refuse to apply the shampoo, although inmates are not told that they have this right.
The jail administers debusing shampoo to new inmates in an effort to avoid lice infestations. Occasionally, lice are discovered on an inmate within the general population of the jail. When this happens, the jail (because it is difficult to determine whether that inmate has spread lice to others) treats the inmate’s entire cell block as if it were contaminated. Everyone on that inmate’s cell block is debused, and the cell block itself (including the bedding, floors, and walls) is disinfected. This is no small task: debusing just one inmate and disinfecting his bedding and bunk area takes approximately 25 minutes. Moreover, if the jail suspects that the infected inmate has traveled to another cell block, that block is disinfected as well. The jail has experienced a number of lice outbreaks in past years, although officials were unable to specify exactly when. An official recalled one occasion on which the entire jail had to be disinfected.
There are some shortcomings in the jail’s efforts to avoid such infestations by administering the debusing shampoo to new inmates, which may help to explain why the jail, by its own admission, finds itself disinfecting one or more cell blocks every six months or so. First, inmates are not told that they should leave the debus-ing shampoo in their hair for ten minutes, as the instructions accompanying Liceall shampoo advise. Second, as we have noted, no effort is made to ensure that an inmate uses the shampoo at all. Third, inmates are not asked to follow-up the initial application of Liceall with a second application seven to 10 days after the first, as the instructions recommend. Fourth, lice can infect not just the scalp but other areas of the body, but no prophylactic efforts are taken to address anything but head lice.
The instructions accompanying the de-busing shampoo advise “caution” in use of the shampoo by individuals who are allergic to ragweed. (The record does not reveal what type of reaction such individuals might have to the shampoo.) The jail does not ask an inmate whether he is allergic to ragweed before giving him the debusing shampoo, nor does it warn the *447 inmate that he might experience an adverse reaction to the shampoo if he does have such an allergy. So far as the record reveals, however, neither Russell nor Gar-riott has such ,a ragweed allergy and neither suffered any adverse reaction to the shampoo.
II.
Russell and Garriot contend that the jail’s policy of instructing new inmates to use a delousing shampoo amounts to involuntary medical treatment. Delousing shampoos do contain chemicals (piperonyl butoxide and pyrethrum extract) that Mil lice. A prescription is not required in order to procure a delousing shampoo, however; and the brand of shampoo used by the jail contains the same active ingredients, and in the same proportions, as the over-the-counter products. Nonetheless, the Indiana pharmacist whose affidavit Richards has made part of the record describes delousing shampoos as medications, and Richards does not contest the notion that use of a delousing shampoo constitutes medical treatment. Like the district court, we shall therefore assume without deciding that it does. Accepting that premise, the jail’s policy of directing an inmate to use a delousing shampoo would implicate the inmate’s constitutionally-protected interest in refusing unwanted medical treatment.
See Cruzan v. Director, Missouri Dep’t of Health,
Turner v. Safley,
Turner
identifies four factors that bear on the reasonableness of the impinging regulation: (1) whether there is “a ‘valid, rational connection’ between the prison regulation and the legitimate governmental interest put forward to justify it,”
Applying the three
Turner
factors that are relevant to involuntary medical
*448
treatment,
see Harper,
We next consider what impact that accommodation of the asserted constitutional right would have on guards and other inmates, as well as prison resources generally. As the right at issue here is an inmate’s right to refuse medical treatment, accommodating that right would mean, presumably, that an inmate would be asked to use the shampoo but also told that he is not required to do so. Thus, an infected inmate could decline to use the shampoo, enter the general population of the jail, and expose other inmates and prison staff members to infestation. The fact that the jail has endured a number of
*449
lice outbreaks in the past demonstrates that this is more than .an abstract possibility. Permitting the individual inmate to reject the delousing shampoo thus would place the health and sanitation of other prisoners and jail staff at risk and give any inmate exposed to lice a potential ground for a lawsuit.
See Kost v. Kozakiewicz,
Finally, we must consider whether there is a ready alternative to the jail’s current policy that would fully accommodate a prisoner’s right to refuse medical treatment while posing only
de minimis
costs to the jail’s legitimate penological interest in preventing lice outbreaks. The plaintiffs suggest that in lieu of administering delousing shampoo to all new inmates, the jail could have someone examine each inmate’s hair and scalp (if not his entire body) in an effort to identify whether that inmate is infected with lice; presumably, then, only infected inmates would be directed to use the shampoo. But the record before us does not permit an assessment as to either the effectiveness or the cost of that alternative. The detection of lice presumably would require a close inspection by a trained staff member; but whether this would significantly lengthen the medical examinations that the jail’already performs on incoming inmates is not a question that the limited evidence in the record answers. The record also does not tell us how effective a visual inspection of one’s person would be in detecting lice. There may also be some inmates who would regard the close level of inspection required in order to detect lice as a more intrusive measure than being handed a cup of debusing shampoo.
See Hamilton v. Schriro,
On balance, then, the record does not support the conclusion that the jail’s policy with respect to debusing shampoo amounts to an unreasonable intrusion on an 'inmate’s constitutional rights. Directing each new inmate to apply debusing shampoo is a logical way to address the jail’s legitimate interest in avoiding outbreaks of lice. Presenting an inmate with the choice of refusing the shampoo would potentially increase the risk of exposing other inmates and jail workers to infestation, particularly in the absence of evidence suggesting that there is any alternative that would be as effective and no more costly in detecting lice and preventing their spread.
We reject the plaintiffs’ suggestion that in addition to the
Turner
factors, the jail should also be required to show, inter alia, that no inmate is instructed to use debus-ing shampoo unless a medical professional first bas determined that the inmate has lice, that application of the shampoo is medically necessary and appropriate for that inmate (taking into account possible side effects, for example), and that there is no less intrusive means of ridding the inmate of the.lice. The plaintiffs construe three ’
post-Turner
cases dealing with the involuntary administration of antipsychotic
*450
medications
—Harper,
Riggins v. Nevada,
So far as the record reveals, the only potential harm that use of the debusing shampoo poses to inmates at the jail is a possible reaction by those inmates with ragweed allergies. But, so far as the record reveals, the plaintiffs themselves do not have such allergies nor did they suffer any adverse reaction to the shampoo. They are, consequently, not in a position to complain about such any such potential adverse effects. 4
What the plaintiffs are in a position to complain about is the interference with their liberty interest in refusing unwanted medication. But, on weighing the factors set out in Turner, we have concluded that the minimal interference with that interest resulting from the jail’s delousing policy is justified. The defendant was therefore entitled to summary judgment on the plaintiffs’ due process claim.
III.
We Affirm the district court’s entry of summary judgment in favor of defendant-appellee Richards.
Notes
. Russell and Garriot apparently were pretrial detainees at the jail. Pre-trial detainees have at least those rights enjoyed by convicted inmates.
Riggins v. Nevada,
.
Harper
deems the second
Turner
factor— whether any alternative means of exercising the right in question remain open to the inmate — irrelevant in the context of involuntary medical treatment, for the obvious reason that the involuntary nature of the treatment deprives the inmate of any choice.
See
.
Harper
also recognized that the State policy authorizing the involuntaiy administration of antipscyhotic medications to inmates under specified conditions gave rise to a liberty interest to be free from the arbitrary administration of such medications,
. Although Russell and Garriot filed this suit as a class action, the district court never certified a class.
