Alcohol
Poisoning Treatment
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The most difficult aspect of alcohol poisoning treatment is making
the appropriate decision to get immediate medical
help. If an individual who has been drinking excessively
continues to fall asleep, waken him or her. If the person does not
respond right away to your efforts, call the police emergency
number (911) and ask for immediate assistance.
Keep this in mind: the faster you respond to
this crisis, the more likely the person with alcohol poisoning will receive successful alcohol
poisoning treatment.
Making the Decision To Seek Immediate
Medical Help
Ironically, the
hardest part about saving an individual from alcohol poisoning does
not occur in the hospital Emergency Room. Neither does
saving an individual from alcohol poisoning involve sophisticated
medical
treatment.
The most difficult part of dealing effectively with an alcohol
overdose situation is making the decision to seek immediate medical
assistance so that the person can receive alcohol poisoning
treatment.
Possible legal repercussions (for instance, for underage
drinkers), public humiliation, the fear of embarrassment, or a lack
of accurate information about the symptoms and the severity of
alcohol poisoning can result in indecisiveness, which can be
fatal.
If a person who has been drinking heavily persists in falling
asleep, waken him or her.
If the individual does not respond to your efforts, it is time
to call the police emergency number (911) and ask for immediate
help. Don't make the mistake of assuming that the individual will
"sleep it off" or would rather not to be disturbed.

Drinking Alcohol and The Influence of Other
Drugs
Moreover, getting the person with alcohol poisoning home and in
bed is not a viable solution and might actually place the person in
danger since he or she is no longer being observed.
Make sure to tell the medical personnel or the ambulance driver
if you know that the person ingested other drugs besides alcohol.
This is mentioned because alcohol, when taken with other drugs,
legal or illegal, accounts for roughly one-third of all drug
overdose cases in the United States.
| Alcohol withdrawal syndrome is a
group of symptoms manifested by individuals who stop drinking
alcohol after a pattern of continuous and excessive
consumption. These symptoms can range from mild to moderate
to severe and include both psychological and behavioral
aspects. |
Alcohol Poisoning Treatment at the
Hospital
After someone calls for medical assistance and emergency medical
services arrives on the scene, the individual with alcohol
poisoning will almost always be taken to a hospital. At
the hospital, alcohol poisoning treatment usually means that the
person's stomach will get pumped.
Also known as or gastric irrigation or gastric lavage, pumping a
person's stomach involves the passage of a tube via the person's
mouth or nose down into the stomach, followed by the administration
and removal of small amounts of saline.
This process is repeated until the returning fluid is clear
(meaning that the stomach contains no further gastric
contents).
| In the fourth and final stage of
alcoholism, the alcoholic manifests an utter disregard for
everything, including shelter, family, food, and job. These
occasional flights into oblivion are best described, ironically, as
drinking to get away from the problems caused by
drinking. |
Alcohol Poisoning Treatment:
Conclusion
The hardest part regarding alcohol
poisoning and treatment is making the decision to seek
immediate medical assistance. For example, if a person who
has been drinking heavily continues to fall asleep, waken him or
her. If the individual does not waken easily and continues to
fall asleep, call the police emergency number (911) and ask for
immediate help so that the person can receive prompt alcohol
poisoning treatment.
| More than 67% of young people
who start drinking before the age of 15 will try an illicit drug.
Children who drink are 7.5 times more likely to use any illicit
drug, more than 22 times more likely to use marijuana, and 50 times
more likely to use cocaine than children who never
drank. |
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| Alcohol is typically found in
the offender, victim or both in about half of all homicides and
serious assaults, as well as in a high percentage of sex-related
crimes, robberies, and incidents of domestic violence, and
alcohol-related problems are disproportionately found among both
juvenile and adult criminal offenders. |
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