Posts Tagged ‘alcohol poisoning’

The Alcohol Related Problems and Alcohol Related Deaths That Are Associated With Heavy and Abusive Drinking

Tuesday, February 9th, 2010

How many people’s lives are cut short due to destructive and hazardous drinking? How many junior high, high school, and college students lose their lives every year due to an alcohol overdose? How many people are the victims of alcohol related crime or violence each and every year? How many people face severe consequences in their lives because they received a “driving under the influence conviction? On an annual basis, how many alcoholics fail to get the professional alcohol treatment they need? How many individuals get injured or lose their lives in alcohol related traffic accidents every year? How many people lose their lives each year from a condition that is one hundred percent preventable, such as alcohol poisoning? How many individuals lose their lives every year because of drinking problems? How many children are born each year with fetal alcohol syndrome?

Why Would Anyone Want to Drink in a Hazardous Manner?

So what’s the point in asking these questions? Basically to highlight the devastating and destructive nature of hazardous and excessive drinking. Indeed, and based on the above questions, I wonder why anyone would choose to drink in an excessive manner.

Stated differently, with the host of employment difficulties, legal proceedings, financial issues, health problems, and relationship dilemmas that are correlated with chronic alcohol abuse and alcohol dependency, why would any individual with good reasoning skills want to drink in a hazardous and irresponsible manner? Indeed when some of the above topics are looked at more closely, abusive and unhealthy drinking makes even less sense and becomes more illogical.

Wouldn’t you think that alcoholics would be able to see some of the alcohol symptoms that they exhibit? In a similar manner doesn’t it seem reasonable to think that many more families would involve themselves in an alcohol intervention for the individual in the household who is an alcoholic or an alcohol abuser? What is more, wouldn’t you think that people who drink heavily would try to learn more about their drinking behavior by reading about various alcohol related statistics?

After reviewing the medical research findings, the point is so significant that it needs to be said again: With all of the damaging and unhealthy effects that are directly or indirectly interlinked with continuous and repetitive alcohol abuse and alcohol addiction, why would any person want to engage in unhealthy drinking?

What Can be Done About the Widespread Nature of Alcohol Abuse and Alcoholism in Our Country?

So what can be done about the widespread nature of alcohol abuse and alcoholism in the U.S.?

  1. Our students need more meaningful and more relevant preventative and educational approaches and methods so that more students at all grade levels, including those at college, are “reached.
  2. With a similar line of reasoning, our students need to learn how to become problem solvers in life rather than getting easily attracted to the “instant gratification” and the “quick fix” of an alcohol or drug abuse ”high” or “buzz”.
  3. Individuals who are alcohol addicts or alcohol abusers need to look look at themselves honestly and ask why they are not getting the professional alcohol rehab they need.
  4. Society needs to get the message to more individuals about the destructive and damaging outcomes of hazardous and careless drinking.

There’s Room For Optimism if Those Who Engage in Unhealthy Drinking Can Become Motivated to Get the Alcohol Treatment They Need

There’s room for hope and optimism if individuals can start drinking in moderation and those who engage in unhealthy and excessive drinkingcan become persuaded to get the alcohol treatment they require. Indeed, why put your loved ones through turmoil, pain, and suffering because of your excessive and abusive drinking when you have the power to control your life by drinking in moderation or even abstaining from drinking if you cannot control your drinking?

 Mail this post

Technorati Tags: , , , , , , , , , , , , ,

A Young Couple Reviews Their Heavy and Hazardous Drinking and Their Short and Long-Term Goals, Aspirations, and Dreams

Saturday, July 25th, 2009

Augie and Merissa have been seeing one another for eight years. They met while taking the same economics class at a small, rural, Church affiliated liberal arts college located in the Southern part of the United States. While they were only good friends at first, they finally began dating when they were in their second year of college.

Because both of them came from very strict backgrounds, neither one of them drank much beyond the experimental stage when they first started to date. As the time went by, however, they began to go to more keg parties, happy hours, sorority and fraternity parties, and football bashes. Consequently, they slowly but surely began to drink increasingly more as they progressed in their relationship.

Their Social Life Regularly Consisted of Going to Happy Hour With Their Friends, Going to Professional Sporting Events, Going to Parties With Their Friends, Going to Restaurants Three or Four Nights Per Week, and Going With Their Friends to the Local Club on the Weekends

After they graduated from college, they both got jobs in a relatively large city that was located about ninety miles from their undergraduate college. Then they finally determined that they would move in with each other.

Because they were far removed from the college drinking scene, however, their social life commonly consisted of going to happy hour with their friends, going to professional sporting events, going to parties with their friends, going to restaurants three or four nights per week, and going to the local disco with their friends on the weekends. In brief, Merissa and Augie began drinking in a hazardous and irresponsible manner.

Now that they were living in the same apartment together and beginning to get more serious about their relationship, nonetheless, they began to think about having children, becoming more responsible, getting married, and buying a house.

With any substantial alteration in an individual’s life there is frequently something that triggers the particular alteration in question. For Augie and Merissa the notion of buying a new house and having children was this “mechanism of change.” Stated more precisely, for the first time in their lives, Augie and Merissa began to critically evaluate their irresponsible and hazardous drinking and the alcohol long term effects on their health.

How Would Their Abusive and Irresponsible Drinking Affect Their Relationship With One Another, Their Ability to Have Children, Their Finances, Their Relationship With Their Parents, and Their Mental Health?

Would their abusive and hazardous drinking negatively affect their ability to have children? How would they be able to continue spending a large percentage of their money on drinking if they were to begin saving for a new house? How responsible would they be if they had children and continued to drink in an irresponsible and excessive manner? How would they be able to face their parents and tell them about their long term dreams, goals, and aspirations while they still drank in an abusive and hazardous manner while having fun as they did when they were in college? What would their abusive drinking do to their relationship? How would their hazardous and abusive drinking affect their mental health?

From a different perspective, although neither one of them ever suffered from alcohol poisoning, received a DUI, or experienced alcohol withdrawal symptoms, they realized that their irresponsible and heavy drinking was becoming a troublesome issue that they could not turn their backs on anymore.

After Giving Their State of Affairs Considerable Deliberation, Merissa and Augie Finally Understood That Their Dreams, Hopes, and Aspirations Would not be Fulfilled if They Continued Their Irresponsible and Heavy Drinking

All of these questions undeniably pointed to the same conclusion: Merissa and Augie needed to be more aware that they couldn’t continue their hazardous and abusive drinking if their hopes, aspirations, and dreams were to be accomplished.

Once they came to this conclusion, they told their drinking buddies about their their goal of buying or building a new house, about their marital plans, and about their plans to start a family. They also told their drinking pals that they still wanted to pal around with them but that they would be drinking in strict moderation from this moment forward so that they could start realizing their future dreams, aspirations, and goals.

Much to their wonder, all of their pals expressed relief because they too had been reexamining their lives and concluded that their life-styles were totally focused on drinking. They also believed that they would have to change significantly if they were to become more responsible and exhibit more care for their careers, their health, and for their goals in the next ten or fifteen years.

After opening up to their buddies about their hopes, plans, and dreams, Augie and Merissa basically started to have more meaningful relationships with all of their pals. The main reason for this was the fact that all of them had the same mindset regarding their abusive and excessive drinking and their relatively short and long-term aspirations, goals, and plans.

 Mail this post

Technorati Tags: , , , , , , , ,

A Night Out With College Buddies at a Local College Saloon Results In Excessive Drinking and Alcohol Poisoning Symptoms

Monday, July 6th, 2009

When Janice was in high school, she had secured a reputation as a studious person who rarely, if ever, drank with her pals. She seemed single-minded about “shining” academically so that she would be able to pursue a career that she not only enjoyed but one that also gave her some security from a financial standpoint.

After much thought, in the end she decided that she wanted to be an attorney. In order to pull this off, nevertheless, she would first have to attend four years of undergrad education.

After Finishing High School Janice Gets Accepted Into A Nationally Ranked Undergrad University as a Springboard For a Career as an Attorney

After Janice graduated from high school, she applied to and was accepted into a highly rated program in economics. Her rationale underlying this decision was that this area of study would be a good springboard for law school and wouldn’t be indistinguishable from the majority of law school applicants who choose political science as their undergraduate major or minor.

After graduating with a 3.9 GPA at the undergrad level, she applied to and was accepted at a well known law school at one of the Big Ten universities.

She was energized by her legal studies but occasionally she was weighed down from all the work that was necessary at law school. In much the same way as she had done in her high school and undergraduate days, however, she made pals without much effort but hardly ever participated in social functions until the term was over.

After Thrilled with the Fact That She Had Done a Super Job on Her Finals, Janice Wanted to Let Her Hair Down and Do Something Besides Studying For a Change

Janice was the kind of individual who worked relentlessly to finish what she was doing and then would take a break when she could. It just so happens, however, that a good number of the things she did between school sessions or during her summer vacations did not have anything to do with drinking. It almost goes without saying that Janice was anything but a partygoer. Now that her finals for her second year in law school were over and feeling proud of the fact that she had done very well on her finals, because of this, she wanted to let her hair down and do something besides studying for a change.

Drinking at a Local Bar and Grill Leads to An Alcohol Overdose, Calling 911, and An Ambulance Ride to An Alcohol Rehab Facility

So Janice and a few of her classmates went to a local watering hole where they started to have a few drinks. As the hours passed, Janice persisted in drinking without having any concerns about research projects or tests the following day. In truth, Janice stated to her pals how delighted she was to whoop it up and drink with classmates from her apartment.

As the evening proceeded, Janice and her pals continued to drink. In fact, she was having such a fantastic time that she didn’t want the night to come to an end. It was almost as if she was making up for lost time and making an effort to compress a year’s worth of fun into a single evening. Such a “game plan,” however, rarely works. In fact, when Janice went to the lady’s room and vomited, her friends started to feel apprehensive about her health.

Around ten minutes later when Janice started to speak in a confused manner, slur her words, and then pass out, nonetheless, her buddies without delay realized that they needed to call 911, the emergency services number, and ask for emergency assistance because they thought that Janice was manifesting alcohol poisoning symptoms.

Once Janice was in the alcohol rehab hospital, the presiding emergency room doctor corroborated what her buddies had speculated, to be precise, that Janice consumed far more alcohol than her body could handle and, consequently, she experienced an alcohol overdose

After the emergency room medical staff pumped her stomach until no gastric contents were visible, Janice was relocated to the recovery room. After staying around five hours in recovery, Janice was then relocated to one of the regular hospital rooms. Fortunately, the most dangerous part of her hospitalization had passed and all of her vital signs were once again in the normal range.

In response to Janice’s medical situation, her classmates attentively called her parents. As a consequence, early the next day, her parents and her best buddies went to the hospital to see how Janice was doing.

Janice Dodges a Bullet, is Thankful to be Alive, and Promises to Never Again Drink in an Excessive and Abusive Manner

Janice was very aware that she had dodged a bullet and, as a consequence, was thankful to be alive. Her Mother and Father knew how rigorously she studied at college and how little she permitted herself to socialize with her pals. Nonetheless, they also knew that Janice needed to avoid abusive drinking.

As a consequence, they suggested that in the future, whenever a drinking opportunity unfolds, that she always drink in moderation. Janice was fine with this and gave her word to her parents and to her friends that she would never again drink in an excessive manner. In her own words, “I never thought that I would become one of the alcohol abuse and alcoholism statistics in the local city newspaper. I now know that excessive drinking is not for me. This will never happen again.”

Fortunately, Janice was not only “book smart” but she also had common sense. Stated more precisely, she quickly knew that she had made an error and made up her mind that she would never make the same error in judgment again. In fact, she now realized that she had involved herself in “binge drinking” and that even one instance of this type of excessive drinking can end in a fatality.

 Mail this post

Technorati Tags: , , , , , ,