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24 September 2014
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Alcohol-related hospital admissions among under-25s in England a third higher than previously thought


New figures obtained by 91Èȱ¬ Radio 1's Newsbeat reveal that the number of under-25s in England ending up in hospital because of excessive drinking is more than a third higher than previously thought.

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The figures released by the North West Public Health Observatory, which collates figures for the Department of Health (DoH), show that 53,844 people under the age of 25 in England alone were admitted to hospital due to alcohol related problems in 2006-07, which compared to 32,928 under the old methodology for the same year.

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In the past, statistics mainly took into account issues like alcohol poisoning, liver disease and alcohol-related mental and behavioural disorders but did not include some of the big alcohol-related injuries.

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The new DoH methodology measures a total of 44 conditions which research shows are caused by or strongly associated with alcohol consumption including road traffic accidents and assaults.

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It is estimated that the NHS in England alone spends £2.7billion per year on alcohol-related hospital admissions.

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Newsbeat's Health Reporter, Tulip Mazumdar, spends a night at Leeds General Infirmary where doctors deal with more than 100 drunk people on an average weekend.

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She witnesses at first hand the immense strain alcohol related admissions are having on Accident and Emergency services and also speaks to medics about their experiences.

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Doctor Philip Morgan, who works in the A&E department at Leeds General Infirmary, describes the average weekend as "carnage".

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"A pretty good word for it would be carnage, I suppose. Drunk people can wander in front of cars or buses. They can get in to fights when they wouldn't normally be the type of person to. They can fall off balconies in nightclubs or fall down stairs," he says.

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In the short time Newsbeat spent at Leeds General Infirmary a number of intoxicated teenagers had to receive treatment after drinking to excess.

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Many had to have their airways cleared because of fears they would choke on their own vomit and one drunk man, being treated for head injuries after getting into a fight, was arrested for aggressive behaviour towards medical staff.

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"We are using our doctors and nurses to look after the drunk people when we should really be looking after people who are in pain, who are injured through no fault of their own...

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"You don't need masses more alcohol if you are already feeling drunk, you need to set yourself a limit and stick to it," says DrÌýMorgan.

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Notes to Editors

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Any use of the above should be credited to 91Èȱ¬ Radio 1's Newsbeat.

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Tulip Mazumdar special report will go out on 91Èȱ¬ Radio 1's Newsbeat on Monday 1 September 2008.

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In Conjunction with Radio 1's Alcohol experiment. See bbc.co.uk/radio1.

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PH

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Category: News; Radio 1
Date: 01.09.2008
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