• This topic has 60 replies, 32 voices, and was last updated 11 years ago by hora.
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  • Alcohol-related admissions to hospitals in England top one-million
  • wwaswas
    Full Member

    from here;

    http://www.hospitalmanagement.net/features/featureppc-alcohol-nhs-nhsic/

    I’m struggling to articulate what I want to say here but basically;

    “Why are humans apparently so desparate to ingest a drug to the point they need medical treatment for the consequences?’

    TandemJeremy
    Free Member

    Dunno- but they certainly are – many different drugs.

    ohnohesback
    Free Member

    Perhaps you should ask why so many people feel that they need to escape their miserable lives by obliterating themselves for a while?

    Nick
    Full Member

    1 beer is never enough, 2 is too many

    coffeeking
    Free Member

    “Why are humans apparently so desparate to ingest a drug to the point they need medical treatment for the consequences?’

    Pretty simple I think. They form probably two main groups. One does so because the initial stages are fun, remove inhibitions and cause pleasure and they get carried away. The second because they wish to numb the boredom and hatred they have for life in general.

    I have been on of those stats, as have most people I’ll bet, though I have to say I’m fairly sure it was tree climbing related, not strictly alcohol…

    BruceWee
    Full Member

    Escapism and self-medication are two that spring to mind. Peer pressure probably a factor as well.

    zimbo
    Free Member

    How about encouragement from the people that flog the stuff, corporately and locally?
    And that sadly pervasive attitude that “I can do what I like…”

    binners
    Full Member

    Junkyard
    Free Member

    75% of prisoners in Scotland were using alcohol when the offence was committed – this seems high but the Scottish minister {MSP launching this] said it yesterday whilst annoucing 50 p per unit.

    Basically people are stupid , they eat to the point they are obesees, get diabetes, smokes fags,drink too much and hiurt themselves falling of bikes etc

    coffeeking
    Free Member

    How about encouragement from the people that flog the stuff, corporately and locally?
    And that sadly pervasive attitude that “I can do what I like…”

    It’s not the sellers fault, it’s personal responsibility.

    Basically people are stupid , they eat to the point they are obesees, get diabetes, smokes fags,drink too much and hiurt themselves falling of bikes etc

    Nahh people are really intelligent, we’ve found a way to trigger our hard-wired pleasure centres very accurately.

    phil.w
    Free Member

    75% of prisoners in Scotland were using alcohol when the offence was committed

    It seems high because the first thought, as implied, is that all the offences were caused by excessive alcohol consumption.

    How many would still have committed the offence without the alcohol?

    Richie_B
    Full Member

    Don’t dispute that alcohol is a problem but the method of recording is greatly skewed by the method of recording of the three people I know who were admitted to hospital this year two were recorded as being alcohol related because both had had a drink in the six hours before the accident.

    In one case it was a fall caused by a hip joint giving up due to osteoporosis. The other was a passenger in a car crash. In both cases the ‘drink’ was a single small glass of wine 2-3 hours before the accident and had no bearing on the accident.

    Don’t know whether this is a localised over enthusiasm on the case of the hospital or a recording method designed to back up an agenda.

    From my own experience of A&E I can see there is a problem, I just don’t see why it needs to be inflated by dodgy recording methods

    zimbo
    Free Member

    It’s not the sellers fault, it’s personal responsibility

    Disagree entirely – when pubs sell trebles cheaper than singles, it’s hardly encouraging sensible drinking is it? Pusher and user both have some responsibility.

    Shred
    Free Member

    Never really understood the peer pressure thing? I have always found it easier to not give in to peer pressure. I’ve never really been interested in being friends with anyone who insists on me following some stupid “norm” before I will be accepted.

    IanMunro
    Free Member

    And in other news from 250 years ago.

    Gin, cursed Fiend, with Fury fraught,
    Makes human Race a Prey.
    It enters by a deadly Draught
    And steals our Life away.

    Virtue and Truth, driv’n to Despair
    Its Rage compells to fly,
    But cherishes with hellish Care
    Theft, Murder, Perjury.

    Damned Cup! that on the Vitals preys
    That liquid Fire contains,
    Which Madness to the heart conveys,
    And rolls it thro’ the Veins.

    binners
    Full Member

    Disagree entirely – when pubs sell trebles cheaper than singles, it’s hardly encouraging sensible drinking is it? Pusher and user both have some responsibility.

    Pusher? Dear God! Really?

    We may need to ease off slightly on the victorian melodrama 😆

    IanMunro
    Free Member

    Never really understood the peer pressure thing? I have always found it easier to not give in to peer pressure. I’ve never really been interested in being friends with anyone who insists on me following some stupid “norm” before I will be accepted.

    I suspect you give into peer pressure all the time, but just aren’t aware of it. For instance if you’re a bloke, you probably don’t go to work in a dress. There’s zillions of things we do to be socially accepted that we just don’t register.
    You’ve registered that drinking is optional and isn’t something you want to do despite peers doing it, but I suspect for many people it’s an unconsciousness social norm, like not wearing a pink tutu.

    wwaswas
    Full Member

    it’s an unconsciousness social norm, like not wearing a pink tutu

    Damn, why is it only me who doesn’t pick up on these things?

    *runs off to find a pair of trousers*

    coffeeking
    Free Member

    Disagree entirely – when pubs sell trebles cheaper than singles, it’s hardly encouraging sensible drinking is it? Pusher and user both have some responsibility.

    Utter rubbish. You don’t have to drink it all, you don’t have to down it. You can buy one and sip it for hours instead of buying 3. Why do you think personal responsibility has been removed and passed to the supplier because someone chose to supply larger amount cheaply?

    Twaddle. People need to learn a bit of self control and responsibility, though your comments are proof it’s pretty lacking and the expectations of it are lacking also.

    Is it now the responsibility of car manufacturers to limit cars to 70 too because some people choose to drive fast? Or the responsibility of internet service providers to limit connection time to help prevent porn addiction? Where do you stop?

    joao3v16
    Free Member

    Basically people are stupid

    Nahh people are really intelligent

    Yes, but only a very small minority behave intelligently.

    Everyone else behaves like a moron.

    zimbo
    Free Member

    Twaddle. People need to learn a bit of self control and responsibility, though your comments are proof it’s pretty lacking and the expectations of it are lacking also

    Yes, it’s patently lacking and that’s why everyone concerned needs to take a look at how they’re behaving. I take it you think cigarette manufacturers behave perfectly ethically? Wise up.

    wombat
    Full Member

    Nick – Member
    1 beer is never enough, 2 is too many

    Not seen George Orwell paraphrased on here before 8)

    zimbo
    Free Member

    Pusher? Dear God! Really?

    That was analogy, not melodrama.

    thisisnotaspoon
    Free Member

    Don’t dispute that alcohol is a problem but the method of recording is greatly skewed by the method of recording of the three people I know who were admitted to hospital this year two were recorded as being alcohol related because both had had a drink in the six hours before the accident.

    +1 I was admited as an alcohol related case as I’d walked through a hedge that was hiding a 7ft ha-ha wall into a car park at 1am, which made a lovely mess of my face! I’d not had a beer since about 8 and that was only a couple.

    MrSmith
    Free Member

    drinking is cool and a sign of manliness, the more you drink the more of a man you become, every cretin knows this.

    coffeeking
    Free Member

    I take it you think cigarette manufacturers behave perfectly ethically? Wise up.

    I don’t know about what’s done behind the scenes in production etc, and I don’t agree to marketting to chiddlers (as with alcohol), but outside that I have no issues with them either. They make a product that people consume, it’s the consumers choice as to whether to consume it or not. There’s nothing to wise up to – it’s simple, if you choose not to do it in the first place you don’t get affected. Assuming someone isn’t mentally deficient it’s their choice to consume. No-ne elses. No-one forced it on them, THEY are to blame for any outcome. No-one forces me to go MTBing, I’m to blame if I injure myself on some giant drop, not my fork manufacturer who told me they’re ace and can handle a 6ft drop. Even though adrenalin is an addictive naturally occuring substance targetted by the market forces that be Marzocchi and On-One.

    zimbo
    Free Member

    I don’t know about what’s done behind the scenes in production etc, and I don’t agree to marketting to chiddlers (as with alcohol), but outside that I have no issues with them either

    So they put chemicals in cigarettes to make them more addictive. When the educated western markets dry up, they exploit the lack of health education in the east. Just let them get on with it all, eh, and blame the consumer? God help us if we lived in a society where no provider had to take responsibility for the goods they sell or the people to whom they sell.

    zimbo
    Free Member

    No-one forces me to go MTBing, I’m to blame if I injure myself on some giant drop, not my fork manufacturer who told me they’re ace and can handle a 6ft drop. Even though adrenalin is an addictive naturally occuring substance targetted by the market forces that be Marzocchi and On-One.

    What an inane analogy. What if they could sell you a bike that was patently, or latently, dangerous to ride. You’d sharp complain then if you were injured.

    binners
    Full Member

    What an inane analogy

    Not half as spurious as yours. Actually…. you are Paul Dacre and I claim my five Guineas pounds 😆

    thisisnotaspoon
    Free Member

    So they put chemicals in cigarettes to make them more addictive.

    Evidence? Nicotine occours naturaly, it’s not an additive, if there was an easy/cheep way of ingesting it we’d probably not have smokers.

    What if they could sell you a bike that was patently, or latently, dangerous to ride. You’d sharp complain then if you were injured.

    No, you’d argue it wasn’t fit for purpose, a cigarette is fit for purpose. Even mountain bikes come with warning stickers advising against doing stunts, riding at night, etc etc, just like cigaretts, but we ignore the warnings becasue we enjoy it, just like smokers ignore the ones on their fags, it’s a personal decision.

    allthegear
    Free Member

    75% of prisoners in Scotland were using alcohol when the offence was committed

    err – well they are in prison an, therefore, not very good at whatever naughty thing they were doing – chances are that alcohol might be involved in making them not very good?

    Rachel

    zimbo
    Free Member

    Nicotine occours naturaly, it’s not an additive

    Might be big news to you, but there’s a lot more in a fag than nicotine.

    coffeeking
    Free Member

    What an inane analogy. What if they could sell you a bike that was patently, or latently, dangerous to ride. You’d sharp complain then if you were injured.

    No, you’re missing the analogy I think. I was analogising with respect to adrenalin – the bike is the tool to get it (much the same as a cigarette is the tool to get nicotine, a beer for alcohol). I choose to ride a bike in a way that produces adrenalin in me, this is dangerous. I’m warned of this when purchasing generally (though it’s clearly considered common sense too, another lack these days). Much the same way as most of the western world knows alchohol and cigarettes are dangerous too (3rd world peddling may be a grey area, I’ll admit I’m not up to speed on that so won’t go there). So:

    Beer > alcohol (addictive, can cause injury directly or indirectly) > blame the brewery.
    Cigarettes > nicotine (addictive, indirectly all the rest that kill you) > blame the cigs company
    Bikes > riding hard produces adrenalin (addictive, actions to get it can kill you)> blame the rider?

    Dont get ya. Either take responsibility for your own actions, or don’t. your choice.

    zimbo
    Free Member

    No, you’d argue it wasn’t fit for purpose

    Yes, it’s not fit for purpose under controls established to protect the consumer from illicit traders. Similarly, controls should exist over what cigarette manufacturers can put in ciggies. Don’t get me wrong, I’m a huge advocate of personal responsibility, but I’m also a huge advocate of us being able to make choices in full knowledge, not in a cloud of pressure and misinformation from unscrupulous sellers.
    Going back to the earlier posts, pubs sell trebles cheaper than singles to get people drunk, because drunk people spend more than relatively sober ones. If that’s not the case, and a treble is £2, why won’t they sell me a single for 66p??

    FunkyDunc
    Free Member

    I was reading this thinking what about mtb’ers too.

    Afterall alot of hospitals admissions are through peoples choice ie deciding to drink, deciding to do drugs, deciding to ride a bike.

    Mrs FD has said the number of bikers she see’s is going up and up (could be related to increased numbers of bikers, or bikers just taking more risks) If your a none professional biker then why should you push yourself to the extent you get injured?

    BruceWee
    Full Member

    If your a none professional biker then why should you push yourself to the extent you get injured?

    Some of us just don’t get pleasure out of anything unless we’re pushing ourselves to improve. If you keep pushing yourself eventually you’re going to get injured.

    Edit: Could be seen the same way when it comes to drink. Many people come from a culture where being able to drink more and not let it affect you is seen as being an impressive thing. Drinking is like anything else, to get good at it you need to practice.

    FunkyDunc
    Free Member

    Same with drink then isn’t it….

    coffeeking
    Free Member

    Going back to the earlier posts, pubs sell trebles cheaper than singles to get people drunk, because drunk people spend more than relatively sober ones. If that’s not the case, and a treble is £2, why won’t they sell me a single for 66p??

    Yep, that’s entirely the case. If you’re daft enough to drink enough to let it affect your senses noteably you’ll spend more. And probably regret it in the morning and blame the pub for offering you much cheapness. Sad isn’t it. We have probably all done it but we don’t have to, plenty of people choose not to drink or can have just one or two and have a great night out.

    binners
    Full Member

    If that’s not the case, and a treble is £2, why won’t they sell me a single for 66p??

    Are you 16? Are you familiar with the concept of capitalism?

    grum
    Free Member

    Yes people should have personal responsibility but so should people selling booze (unlikely). If marketing/advertising and drinks promotions had no effect why do drinks companies spend so much money on it? Coupled with the rise of ‘vertical drinking’ establishments that deliberately play the music so loud you can’t talk so drink more.

    Yes I avoid those places like the plague too, but I think it’s very naive to deny any impact of booze marketing/sales techniques.

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