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ALCOHOL AND INJURY Presented by The American College of Surgeons Committee on Trauma Trauma Prevention Series © ACS 2000
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OVERVIEW Leading cause of death between 1 and 40 years of age 80 percent teenage deaths 60 percent childhood deaths Increased risk in elderly
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STATISTICS Deaths = 150,000 Injured = 70,000,000 Temporarily disabled = 11,000,000 Permanently disabled = 450,000
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TIP OF THE ICEBERG Death from injury is just the tip of the iceberg ! Injury: 2.6 million hospital discharges /year 37 million emergency department visits/year
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CAUSES TOTAL OF 150,000 DEATHS 2/3 from unintentional trauma Motor vehicle crashes Falls Work-related accidents Recreational and home mishaps 1/3 from violence
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TRAUMA IS NO ACCIDENT!
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ALCOHOL CONSUMPTION People who reported drinking in the past month >60% of those aged 21-49 years 70% of men 26-34 years of age 54% of women 26-34 years of age
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RISK Those who drink have a greater chance of dying from injury and sustaining nonfatal injury Even those who drink at relatively low levels (1 drink/day) are at greater risk of injury
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CONTRIBUTORY ROLE OF ALCOHOL 40% of motor vehicle crash deaths involve alcohol 40% of pedestrians killed had been drinking The deadly triad: Alcohol Minor grievance Weapon
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MAGNITUDE OF PROBLEM
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ALCOHOL IS A DRUG
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COMMON MISCONCEPTION
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AN UNUSUAL DRUG Requires no digestion Is rapidly and completely absorbed from stomach and upper intestine
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CONCENTRATES IN THE BRAIN
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EFFECTS ON REACTIONS First effects are on the brain, including: Thinking Judgment Reasoning Reflex activity Control
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EFFECTS ON OPERATION OF MOTOR VEHICLE Shortens attention span Slows reaction time Decreases performance of motor tasks Causes misconceptions
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EFFECTS ON BEHAVIOR
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FATE OF INGESTED ALCOHOL METABOLIZED BY: Liver (80%) Lungs/kidneys (10%) Other sites (10%)
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HOW THE LIVER METABOLIZES ALCOHOL
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ALCOHOL METABOLISM Rate is limited Equivalent to approximately 1 drink per hour
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RELATIONSHIP OF NUMBER OF DRINKS AND BLOOD ALCOHOL CONCENTRATION
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RELATIONSHIP OF BLOOD ALCOHOL CONCENTRATION AND CRASH RESPONSIBILITY
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CARNAGE ON THE HIGHWAY
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ALCOHOL AND TRAUMA Emergency department patients with positive blood alcohol concentrations (100 mg/dL or less): 15%-25% of total Trauma center patients with positive blood alcohol concentrations: 26%-52% of men 14%-42% of women
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ALCOHOL,OTHER DRUGS, AND TRAUMA 50% of the time, other illicit drugs are used with alcohol: Marijuana (3%-37%) Cocaine (5%-34%) Opiates (12%-17%)
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PREVENTION STRATEGIES PRINCIPLE OF DETERRENCE Certainty of detection is more is more effective than the severity of the punishment
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ALCOHOL ADDICTION Injury episode may be the first symptom of a treatable alcohol problem 15%-50% injured patients in the emergency department have alcohol dependence, compared with 7%-8% of the general population
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WHAT IS SOCIAL DRINKING? Moderate social drinking: No more than 2 drinks per day for men No more than 1 drink per day for women (National Institute on Alcohol Abuse and Alcoholism, 1995)
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ALCOHOL AND TRAUMA RECIDIVISM Five-year follow-up of 246 patients 44% readmission rate 20% mortality rate 77% of deaths were due to continuing substance abuse
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IDENTIFICATION OF SUBSTANCE ABUSE Injury episode is a great opportunity History of : Previous injury when under the influence A drunk/impaired driving conviction
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LABORATORY TESTS Positive blood alcohol concentration Positive tox screen Abnormal liver function test
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QUESTIONNAIRES CAGE (4 questions): Cutting down on drinking? Annoyed by criticism? Guilt feelings? Eye opening ability? Audit (10 questions): Alcohol use disorders identification test BMAST (10 questions): Brief Michigan Alcoholism Screening Test
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DOES INTERVENTION WORK? Of a total of 3,358 trauma patients, 2,524 were screened –762 positive patients were randomized 396 to control 366 to intervention –304 of 366 completed intervention (Harborview Medical Center, 1999)
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DOES INTERVENTION WORK? 47% reduction in return to emergency department (1 year) 48% reduction in in-patient readmits (3 years) All other outcomes (traffic violations, DUI, arrests, and so on) less in intervention group (Harborview Medical Center, 1999)
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SUMMARY Alcohol intervention has significant potential as injury prevention Actively promoting alcohol intervention may have a major impact on long-term health and future injury risk
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DRINKING AND DRIVING DONT MIX
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