Death, Abuse and Alcohol

When Bringing in the New Year 2014 be wise in your choice of drink, the demon drink is taking over the world and causing many countries to question how they control the problem alcohol is causing to young and old alike. Nurses Announcements Archive Article

As 2013 draws to a close all over the world we need to stop and think about what this night means to many families, friends and the Emergency Room. Many of us are planning a night of celebration, which involves loud music, games, copious amounts of food and of course lots of Alcohol.

New Year for me has been very mixed over the years, full of emotion but I am one of the few who really doesn't pay much attention to it. Often I would volunteer to work to allow others to enjoy the festivities.

Am I strange? No there are many people like me out there, people who have witnessed the darker side of New Year Celebrations. For me a child of an Alcoholic and a mother who would fight with drunken husband, this is a night when all bets are off as far as alcohol are concerned.

Alcohol causes more problems than we give credit, we know it does but it is a legal way to feel good. Alcohol is the root to all-evil, we have all seen the signs on the corners of big cities. Don't get me wrong I enjoy a drink or two and I am a happy drunk, but fortunately for me with my family background I get the most horrendous hangovers known to mankind so I steer clear.

For Nurses, New Year tends to hold a particular bitter sweetness, we want to celebrate but we know the kind of victims, or should I say patients will be brought in over the next 24 hours.

The amount of Drunk Drivers increases over New Year, Drunk drivers cause more families to be broken hearted over New Year than any other day of the year, and any other drink inspired holiday.

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The U.S. National Institute on Alcohol Abuse and Alcoholism (NIAAA) reports that 40% of traffic-related deaths during Christmas and New Year's involve drunk drivers -- a 12% increase over the rest of the month of December

During the Christmas period, for example, an average of 45 fatalities involving an alcohol-impaired driver occurred each day, and soared to 54 per day over the New Year's holiday

Hospital admissions can increase by up to 50% over Christmas and New Year. A hospital in Dublin, Ireland said that they are witnessing an alarming increase in hospital admissions related to over consumption of alcohol and over New Year 2013 this amounted to 50% of the actual admissions. In the UK statistics are showing an increase in alcohol admissions, and health care professionals are calling for stricter rules and regulations to govern alcohol sales.

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Data from the Government's Health and Social Care Information Centre shows that in 2012/13, a total of 26,209 men and 12,461 women aged 45 to 49 ended up in hospital purely due to alcohol

We have to acknowledge that this is a growing problem, not only here in the US but worldwide! In France they are experiencing similar problems, we have always believed there are less problems with alcohol in Europe because they introduce wine drinking with meals to young people, resulting in less problems as adults.

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Short-term admissions for binge drinking symptoms up 80%

Latest figures show drinking killed 49,000 people in France in 2009

40% of the deaths were people under the age of 65

Australia is also affected by alcohol fueled hospital admissions, and New Year is particularly worrying. A study by the government showed frightening statistics.

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On New Year's Day, alcohol intoxication- related ambulance attendances increased by 75 per cent, emergency presentations increased by 50 per cent, compared to the average.

There was a three-fold increase in ambulance attendances for intoxication on New Year's Eve, with similar increases in hospital presentations and admissions

Finally we cannot forget the victims of domestic violence and abuse that has the potential to increase Christmas and New Year. Unfortunately statistics do not prove that there is an increase in domestic violence during this holiday period, and could be due to the abused being reluctant to 'spoil the holiday', so don't present in the ER or at shelters. Some shelters report a decrease in admission during this time.

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In response to requests from the field for statistics on the prevalence of domestic violence during the holidays,the NRCDV has not been able to find any reliable, national study linking the holidays with an increase indomestic violence, nor have we found any national data on the number of calls to shelters or to lawenforcement over the holidays.
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Around this time, heightened family tensions, unrealistic expectations and worries about finances can, when fueled by excessive drinking, lead to an increase in the number and severity of attacks. Victims can also feel more isolated than usual because they do not want to spoil other people's celebrations.

So as Nurses and Healthcare professionals what can we do? We can educate, one patient at a time, starting within our own family. We can support and we can listen.

When I was researching this article, I found many sources which call for an increase in cost of alcohol-I for one do not think this will solve the problem, it will only make the manufacturers richer. People who want to drink will always find the money to do so, in Victorian England,poverty was extreme but money was always found for Alcohol. Some will forgo food in order to purchase alcohol, resulting in more domestic violence.

What we need is more education, more extreme advertising against alcohol, more campaigning within schools, less tolerance of drunk drivers and abusers. Graphic illustrations of accidents, abused wives and kids, plus explanation in detail of the ravages of alcohol on the body.

I don't know the answers, do you?

I grew up in an Irish/Aboriginal family. Alcohol was, and still is, a part of life. I think teaching responsibility is far superior than the puritan style abstinence I've seen on this thread. My dad read a lot of James Crumley, and always agreed with this quote:

"Son, never trust a man who doesn't drink because he's probably a self-righteous sort, a man who thinks he knows right from wrong all the time. Some of them are good men, but in the name of goodness, they cause most of the suffering in the world. They're the judges, the meddlers. And, son, never trust a man who drinks but refuses to get drunk. They're usually afraid of something deep down inside, either that they're a coward or a fool or mean and violent. You can't trust a man who's afraid of himself. But sometimes, son, you can trust a man who occasionally kneels before a toilet. The chances are that he is learning something about humility and his natural human foolishness, about how to survive himself. It's damned hard for a man to take himself too seriously when he's heaving his guts into a dirty toilet bowl."