Sunday, November 27, 2011

Energy drinks caused the transfer of thousands of people to the emergency

Energy drinks caused the transfer of thousands of people to the emergency
Report says that visits to the emergency room in the hospital up to ten-fold since 2005, after the excessive energy drinks.



 
Between a government report that the new emergency department in the hospital in October of 2011, there was a significant rise in the number of people who need urgent medical attention after drinking energy drinks that contain caffeine. The report shows that increased the number of visits to the emergency room ten times the time between 2005 and 2009 due to energy drinks.


1.128 people visited the emergency department in 2005 after the energy drink, compared with 13.114 visited the emergency in 2009, this number reached its peak in 2008 with the visit of more than 16,000 people to the emergency room.



 
Register beverage manufacturers in the statistics that the transfer of beverage has become misleading since it was taken out of context.


The statement says, "However, this report did not give any information about public health in people who took the Al-energy drinks, or even what are the symptoms complained of by these people and that made them go to the emergency hospital in the first place."


The report shows that most people who visited the hospital, they told the doctor that they only drank energy drink, while 44% of the cases dealt with energy drink with alcohol or other drugs.


Dr. Albert Woodward, Director of Network Drugs and Mental Health Services Administration in Rockville, Md. "There was not a great deal of attention to energy drinks that contain alcohol, but what we found is that there are a large number of those who visited the Emergency Department took the energy drinks that do not contain alcohol ".
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Woodward says, "that people think that alcohol caffeine dangerous, but it may not have any idea that the only caffeine drinks also have potential problems."


Dr. Cecil Markzynski an assistant professor in the Faculty of Psychology at the University of Kentucky, North "A lot of my research work on the combination of alcohol and energy drinks, and I know that this danger really, but energy drinks in itself may be dangerous," it is supposed to contain about the same amount of caffeine in a cup of coffee.


Markzynski but said she learned recently that the manufacturers do not have the report of the amount of caffeine contained in drinks. They have just a list of what they say. There may be much more than that of caffeine that comes from stimulant herbs such as guarana.

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