Teens Turn to Hand Sanitizer to Get Drunk
By Lylah
M. Alphonse, Senior Editor
Is drinking alcohol-based hand sanitizer the new teen trend?Six teenagers have
ended up in San Fernando Valley emergency rooms recently with symptoms of alcohol
poisoning. But the illicit alcohol didn't come from their parents' liquor
cabinets or from illegally purchased beers. These teens
got drunk -- and dangerously ill -- drinking hand sanitizer.
They're
not drinking the gel straight from the dispenser. Some of the teens reportedly
used salt to isolate the ethyl alcohol in the disinfectant, turning the gel
into a shot of something like liquor; others go online to find distillation
instructions. Since most hand sanitizers are 62 percent to 65 percent ethyl
alcohol, the drink distilled from it can be as high as 120 proof. (In contrast,
a standard shot of vodka is about 40 percent alcohol, or 80 proof.)
"All it takes is just a few swallows and you have a
drunk teenager," Cyrus Rangan, director of the toxicology bureau for the
county public health department and a medical toxicology consultant for
Children's Hospital Los Angeles, told the Los
Angeles Times. "There is no question that it
is dangerous."
In the
past, people in search of a quick high have turned to cough medicine (in large
amounts, the cough suppressant dextramethorphan can cause hallucinations and
"out-of-body" sensations), alcohol-based mouthwash, and even common
kitchen ingredients like vanilla or lemon extract.
The hand-sanitizer trend is alarming, but it's not
necessarily new. In 2007, The New England Journal
of Medicine published an article about a
49-year-old prison inmate who went form "usually calm" to
"described as being 'red-eyed,' 'loony,' 'combative,' and 'intoxicated,
lecturing everyone about life" after drinking from a gallon container of a
popular hand sanitizer over the course of several hours. According to a 2012
report in "Critical
Care Medicine," from 2005 to 2009 the
number of new cases of hand sanitizer ingestion increased by an average of
1,894 per year. And the American
Association of Poison Control Centers says
that in 2006, poison centers reported 11,914 "exposures" to
ethanol-containing hand sanitizers, 2,307 to people older than 6.
The six California teens arrived in the emergency rooms
with slurred speech and burning sensations in their stomachs. Some of them were
so drunk that they needed to be monitored, CBS
News reported.
"It
is kind of scary that they go to that extent to get a shot of essentially hard
liquor," Rangan pointed out.
Dr.
Robert Glatter, an emergency medicine physician at Lenox Hill Hospital in New
York City, told CBS News that he's seen something similar, when a few teenagers
ingested hand sanitizer as a "dare."
"They
denied drinking any 'alcohol', had no smell of alcohol on their breath, but
when their blood alcohol was quite elevated, they later admitted to drinking
the hand sanitizer," Glatter said.
Concerned
parents should consider monitoring their kids' use of alcohol-based hand
sanitizers, buying foam-based ones that are more difficult to distill or drink
as-is, or using non-alcohol versions instead.
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