It's
no secret teenagers sometimes experiment with alcohol, even drugs, but
new ways they're finding to get drunk had jaws dropping in our newsroom.
"Quicker
high, they think it's going to last longer, it's more intense," said
Dr. Dan Quan from Maricopa Medical Center. "This is not isolated to any
school, any city, any financial area," Officer Chris Thomas, a school
resource officer, said. "This is everywhere."
When
we heard how kids are getting drunk these days, we thought no way. So
we hit up the experts to find out if it's an urban legend or if it's
legit.
"There's
been documented cases of people going to the hospital with alcohol
poisoning just from utilizing it that way," Thomas said. Thomas spends
his days patrolling the halls of a Valley high school. He's heard first
hand how kids are getting tipsy.
"What
we're hearing about is teenagers utilizing tampons, soak them in vodka
first before using them," Thomas said. "It gets absorbed directly into
the bloodstream. There's no barrier, there's no stomach acid to prevent
it," Thomas said. "I would expect it to absorb pretty quickly as well,
because it's a very vascular structure," Quan told the newspaper. "This
is definitely not just girls," Thomas said. "Guys will also use it."
But
take it from this cop, it won't work. It's not just jail time that
might be a problem, these new tricks are really risky and could cause
some serious problems. "It can cause mucosal irritation," Quan said.
Plus, what if you over do it? Irritation could be the least of your
problems. "Some of the dangers associated with this is there's no
barrier," Thomas said.
There's
also no gag reflex, and if it isn't going down the hatch you won't have
that tell tale sign you've had too much to drink, which means you won't
throw up if you've got alcohol poisoning, and you'll pass out before
you know there's a problem. "It's problematic because you don't really
know how much you're going to absorb," Quan said. It turns out that a
super tampon can hold about a shot of vodka, which is pretty potent when
it's going straight into your system.
"If
the person does pass out or lose consciousness, health care
professionals won't necessarily know that they have to look in those
areas and that may delay treatment," Quan said.
Another
myth is that kids apparently think getting drunk that way means they
would pass a breathalyzer test because they didn't drink the booze, but
that's not true. The test checks out what's in your blood stream, not
what's on your breath.
No comments:
Post a Comment