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The Rise of New Alcoholic Games Among Adolescents and the Consequences in the Emergency Department: Observational Retrospective Study

BACKGROUND: The links between the internet and teenager behavior are difficult situations to control and may lead to the development of new and excessive methods of drinking alcohol during alcoholic games. Findings indicate that reported cases are very useful sources for better understanding of alco...

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Autores principales: Barbieri, Stefania, Omizzolo, Luca, Tredese, Alberto, Vettore, Gianna, Calaon, Alberto, Behr, Astrid Ursula, Snenghi, Rossella, Montisci, Massimo, Gaudio, Rosa Maria, Paoli, Andrea, Pietrantonio, Vincenzo, Santi, Jacopo, Donato, Daniele, Carretta, Giovanni, Dolcet, Annalisa, Feltracco, Paolo
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: JMIR Publications 2018
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6715062/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/31518328
http://dx.doi.org/10.2196/pediatrics.6578
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author Barbieri, Stefania
Omizzolo, Luca
Tredese, Alberto
Vettore, Gianna
Calaon, Alberto
Behr, Astrid Ursula
Snenghi, Rossella
Montisci, Massimo
Gaudio, Rosa Maria
Paoli, Andrea
Pietrantonio, Vincenzo
Santi, Jacopo
Donato, Daniele
Carretta, Giovanni
Dolcet, Annalisa
Feltracco, Paolo
author_facet Barbieri, Stefania
Omizzolo, Luca
Tredese, Alberto
Vettore, Gianna
Calaon, Alberto
Behr, Astrid Ursula
Snenghi, Rossella
Montisci, Massimo
Gaudio, Rosa Maria
Paoli, Andrea
Pietrantonio, Vincenzo
Santi, Jacopo
Donato, Daniele
Carretta, Giovanni
Dolcet, Annalisa
Feltracco, Paolo
author_sort Barbieri, Stefania
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: The links between the internet and teenager behavior are difficult situations to control and may lead to the development of new and excessive methods of drinking alcohol during alcoholic games. Findings indicate that reported cases are very useful sources for better understanding of alcoholic games, yielding successful measures promoting health among adolescents. Admittance of adolescents to hospital emergency departments (EDs) after consumption of excessive amounts of alcohol has become the norm in developed countries. The harmful effects of acute alcohol abuse are reported in this paper. OBJECTIVE: The aim of this work was to investigate the close connections between new drinking behaviors among adolescents and study the increase in new alcoholic games, together with the challenges that cause acute alcohol intoxication, the influence of the internet and social networks, and their consequences for public health services. METHODS: Data came from prehospital and intrahospital admissions attributable to alcohol consumption. From 2013 to 2015, 3742 patients were admitted to EDs due to acute alcohol intoxication: 830 of them were aged 15 to 30 years, and 225 were adolescents and young adults between 15 and 20 years who had been playing alcoholic games. Retrospectively, diagnostic data associated with extrahospital anamneses were selected by one of the hospital management information systems, Qlik. As a result of our previous experience, questionnaires and face-to-face interviews were performed at a later stage, when a clinical audit for intoxicated adolescent patients was described, with the overall goal of establishing a potential methodological workflow and adding important information to research carried out so far. RESULTS: Between 2013 and 2015, 830 young patients aged 15 to 30 years were admitted to EDs for acute alcohol intoxication. About 20% (166/830) of the sample confirmed that they had drunk more than 5 alcoholic units within 2 hours twice during the past 30 days as a result of binge drinking. Referring to new alcoholic games, 41% of the sample stated that they knew what neknomination is and also that at least one of their friends had accepted this challenge, describing symptoms such as vomiting, headache, altered behavior, increased talkativeness, and sociability. The median value of the weighted average cost of the diagnosis-related group relating to interventions provided by hospitals was the same for both genders, €46,091 (US $56,497; minimum €17,349 and maximum €46,091). CONCLUSIONS: Drinking games encourage young people to consume large quantities of alcohol within a short period of time putting them at risk of alcohol poisoning, which can potentially lead to accidental injuries, unsafe sex, suicide, sexual assault, and traffic accidents. The spread of these games through the internet and social networks is becoming a serious health problem facing physicians and medical professionals every day, especially in the ED; for this reason, it is necessary to be aware of the risks represented by such behaviors in order to recognize and identify preliminary symptoms and develop useful prevention programs. The strategic role of emergency services is to monitor and define the problem right from the start in order to control the epidemic, support planning, coordinate the delivery of assistance in the emergency phase, and provide medical education. Hospital-based interdisciplinary health care researchers collected specific data on hazardous drinking practices linked to evaluation of increased alcohol-related consequences and cases admitted to the ED.
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spelling pubmed-67150622019-09-17 The Rise of New Alcoholic Games Among Adolescents and the Consequences in the Emergency Department: Observational Retrospective Study Barbieri, Stefania Omizzolo, Luca Tredese, Alberto Vettore, Gianna Calaon, Alberto Behr, Astrid Ursula Snenghi, Rossella Montisci, Massimo Gaudio, Rosa Maria Paoli, Andrea Pietrantonio, Vincenzo Santi, Jacopo Donato, Daniele Carretta, Giovanni Dolcet, Annalisa Feltracco, Paolo JMIR Pediatr Parent Original Paper BACKGROUND: The links between the internet and teenager behavior are difficult situations to control and may lead to the development of new and excessive methods of drinking alcohol during alcoholic games. Findings indicate that reported cases are very useful sources for better understanding of alcoholic games, yielding successful measures promoting health among adolescents. Admittance of adolescents to hospital emergency departments (EDs) after consumption of excessive amounts of alcohol has become the norm in developed countries. The harmful effects of acute alcohol abuse are reported in this paper. OBJECTIVE: The aim of this work was to investigate the close connections between new drinking behaviors among adolescents and study the increase in new alcoholic games, together with the challenges that cause acute alcohol intoxication, the influence of the internet and social networks, and their consequences for public health services. METHODS: Data came from prehospital and intrahospital admissions attributable to alcohol consumption. From 2013 to 2015, 3742 patients were admitted to EDs due to acute alcohol intoxication: 830 of them were aged 15 to 30 years, and 225 were adolescents and young adults between 15 and 20 years who had been playing alcoholic games. Retrospectively, diagnostic data associated with extrahospital anamneses were selected by one of the hospital management information systems, Qlik. As a result of our previous experience, questionnaires and face-to-face interviews were performed at a later stage, when a clinical audit for intoxicated adolescent patients was described, with the overall goal of establishing a potential methodological workflow and adding important information to research carried out so far. RESULTS: Between 2013 and 2015, 830 young patients aged 15 to 30 years were admitted to EDs for acute alcohol intoxication. About 20% (166/830) of the sample confirmed that they had drunk more than 5 alcoholic units within 2 hours twice during the past 30 days as a result of binge drinking. Referring to new alcoholic games, 41% of the sample stated that they knew what neknomination is and also that at least one of their friends had accepted this challenge, describing symptoms such as vomiting, headache, altered behavior, increased talkativeness, and sociability. The median value of the weighted average cost of the diagnosis-related group relating to interventions provided by hospitals was the same for both genders, €46,091 (US $56,497; minimum €17,349 and maximum €46,091). CONCLUSIONS: Drinking games encourage young people to consume large quantities of alcohol within a short period of time putting them at risk of alcohol poisoning, which can potentially lead to accidental injuries, unsafe sex, suicide, sexual assault, and traffic accidents. The spread of these games through the internet and social networks is becoming a serious health problem facing physicians and medical professionals every day, especially in the ED; for this reason, it is necessary to be aware of the risks represented by such behaviors in order to recognize and identify preliminary symptoms and develop useful prevention programs. The strategic role of emergency services is to monitor and define the problem right from the start in order to control the epidemic, support planning, coordinate the delivery of assistance in the emergency phase, and provide medical education. Hospital-based interdisciplinary health care researchers collected specific data on hazardous drinking practices linked to evaluation of increased alcohol-related consequences and cases admitted to the ED. JMIR Publications 2018-04-27 /pmc/articles/PMC6715062/ /pubmed/31518328 http://dx.doi.org/10.2196/pediatrics.6578 Text en ©Stefania Barbieri, Luca Omizzolo, Alberto Tredese, Gianna Vettore, Alberto Calaon, Astrid Ursula Behr, Rossella Snenghi, Massimo Montisci, Rosa Maria Gaudio, Andrea Paoli, Vincenzo Pietrantonio, Jacopo Santi, Daniele Donato, Giovanni Carretta, Annalisa Dolcet, Paolo Feltracco. Originally published in JMIR Pediatrics and Parenting (http://pediatrics.jmir.org), 27.04.2018. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work, first published in JMIR Pediatrics and Parenting, is properly cited. The complete bibliographic information, a link to the original publication on http://pediatrics.jmir.org, as well as this copyright and license information must be included.
spellingShingle Original Paper
Barbieri, Stefania
Omizzolo, Luca
Tredese, Alberto
Vettore, Gianna
Calaon, Alberto
Behr, Astrid Ursula
Snenghi, Rossella
Montisci, Massimo
Gaudio, Rosa Maria
Paoli, Andrea
Pietrantonio, Vincenzo
Santi, Jacopo
Donato, Daniele
Carretta, Giovanni
Dolcet, Annalisa
Feltracco, Paolo
The Rise of New Alcoholic Games Among Adolescents and the Consequences in the Emergency Department: Observational Retrospective Study
title The Rise of New Alcoholic Games Among Adolescents and the Consequences in the Emergency Department: Observational Retrospective Study
title_full The Rise of New Alcoholic Games Among Adolescents and the Consequences in the Emergency Department: Observational Retrospective Study
title_fullStr The Rise of New Alcoholic Games Among Adolescents and the Consequences in the Emergency Department: Observational Retrospective Study
title_full_unstemmed The Rise of New Alcoholic Games Among Adolescents and the Consequences in the Emergency Department: Observational Retrospective Study
title_short The Rise of New Alcoholic Games Among Adolescents and the Consequences in the Emergency Department: Observational Retrospective Study
title_sort rise of new alcoholic games among adolescents and the consequences in the emergency department: observational retrospective study
topic Original Paper
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6715062/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/31518328
http://dx.doi.org/10.2196/pediatrics.6578
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