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Alcohol Poisoning | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
In 1984 a federal law required all states to set 21 as the legal age for purchase or public possession of alcoholic beverages. States that did not comply would lose a portion of their federal highway construction funding. The federal law was tied to highway construction funding because of the overwhelming evidence that lower drinking ages result in significantly higher motor vehicle fatalities involving young drivers. Since that time, many traffic safety organizations, including Remove Intoxicated Drivers (RID), have taken a leadership role in supporting efforts to increase compliance with the drinking age laws. Increased awareness about alcohol poisoning can play a key role in the prevention of underage drinking.
Knowing the Facts Can Save Lives Until the 1990’s, deaths due to alcohol poisoning were largely ignored by the media. Families who lost a child due to AOD (alcohol overdose) suffered in silence. College campuses, where a great many of the deaths occurred, sought to avoid adverse publicity. Death certificates said “cardiac arrest” or “asphyxiation.” Medical examiners sometimes chose to tell a grieving family, “It was a freak accident,” rather than “Your son/daughter drank him/herself to death.” In 1994, a Federal law was passed requiring colleges to publish all student deaths. Finally, these tragic AOD stories are in newspapers and on national television; stories like the one about a 16-year-old cheerleader in Illinois who died after drinking a bottle of schnapps on a friend’s dare. Remove Intoxicated Drivers (RID) began working on the problem of AOD in 1992. Based on discussions with victims’ families and county medical examiners, RID estimates as many as 4,000 deaths occur each year from alcohol overdosing: drinking too much alcohol too fast. Families learn, in the most difficult way, that alcohol can be a lethal drug.
Teenagers are particularly vulnerable to AOD. Of the first 8 cases RID discovered, half were 16 years old or younger. At least half were first-time drinkers and had never been drunk before. Five were put to bed by friends or their own parents to “sleep it off,” only to be found dead in the morning. Their friends or parents didn’t know that if a person drinks too much alcohol quickly before falling asleep, the alcohol will shut down breathing and heart functions and kill a person within a few hours. Until now, the lack of public information about AOD has been a national failure. The following information literally saves lives. It could save a friend or maybe even you. Teens pictured in this piece died from alcohol poisoning.
Mechanisms of alcohol poisoning Alcohol depresses nerves that control involuntary actions such as breathing, the heart beat, and the gag reflex (prevents choking). A fatal dose of alcohol will eventually stop these functions. After the victim stops drinking, the heart keeps beating, and alcohol in the stomach continues to enter the bloodstream and circulate throughout the body.
As a result, the following can happen:
Even if the victim lives, AOD can lead to irreversible brain damage. Rapid binge drinking (which often happens on a bet or a dare) is especially dangerous because the victim can ingest a fatal dose before becoming unconscious.
Critical signs for alcohol poisoning:
Many people try different methods to reverse the effects of alcohol to become sober. Most of these methods are myths, and they don’t work.
Some common myths:
If you suspect that someone may have ingested a fatal dose of alcohol, help is required immediately:
When medical personnel arrive, they should:
Some conventional treatments do not work for AOD:
Bystanders (friends, parents, strangers) have a responsibility:
What you can do – A call to action
For more information about alcohol poisoning, write or fax questions to:
RID Celebrates Twentieth Anniversary, February 1998
Twenty years ago, RID began a successful but lonely confrontation with the legal system’s handling of impaired drivers in New York. In 1980, RID enabled the passage of laws curtailing plea bargaining, test refusals, leaving the scene of personal injury crashes, and placing self-funding enforcement measures in every county, along with other legislation that had been vetoed for years. RID’s efforts supported a 23 percent drop in alcohol-related fatalities from 1981 to 1986, the best record in the nation for that period. New York and Utah still have the best last-3-year record in deterring fatal crashes, and under 25 percent of the reported road fatalities were due to legally intoxicated drivers.
Other Milestones Initiated by RID:
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