| 
	| crime.files |  
	|  |  |  |   
 
	| crime.features |  
	|  |  |  |   
 
	| crime.resources |  
	|  |  |  |   
 
	| crime.co.nz |  
	|  |  |  |   
 
   |  |  |  How Much Is Too Much?
 Alcohol can be measured in standard drinks which have about 10mls of pure alcohol in them. Typical standard drinks are:
 
 Beer (4 per cent alcohol)			250mls
 Wine (11 per cent alcohol)			90mls
 Sherry/Liquors (18 per cent alcohol)		60mls
 Spirits (40 per cent alcohol)			25mls
 It takes an hour for the liver to break down or metabolize one standard drink.
 How much a person drinks is ultimately their choice, made for health and safety reasons. Keep in mind that the World Health Organisation recommends:
 
 Men should have no more than 3-4 standard glasses 3-4 times per week
 Women should have no more than 2-3 standard glasses 2-3 times per week
 
 How Will It Affect You?
 
 
 Alter emotions
 make people angry, frustrated, violent, depressed
 
 Affect judgement
 it changes the chemical balance of the brain, and brain messages can get confused, impairing judgement.
 
 Slow reactions and alter co-ordination
 alcohol is quickly absorbed into the blood and rapidly affects the body. A person may feel relaxed and confident but proper coordination and reaction is lost.
 
 Reduce concentration
 alcohol is a sedative so it slows down the brain’s normal function processes. Abuse can cause memory loss and affect the ability for learning.
 
 Alcohol is measured in milligrams per 100 millilitres of blood. How alcohol would affect an average-sized person at one drinking session is shown below:
 
 Blood alcohol level Effect
 
 0-50mg/100ml  Talkative, feeling of wellbeing
50-80mg/100ml  Attention and reaction slowed
80-160mg/100ml  Speech, balance, judgment, eyesight, movement and walking affected; sleepy, vomiting
150-400mg/100ml  Heavy breathing, “dead” drunk, no bladder control, coma
More than 400mg/100ml  Potentially lethal, shock, death 
 Abusing alcohol risks good health
 
 Liver
 
 Alcohol is a toxin that is processed in the human body by the liver. But the liver is only able to process the amount of alcohol in one standard drink each hour. That means it'll take five hours to process the alcohol in five glasses of wine. So it takes time to sober up someone who's drunk. Coffee, fresh air, cold showers, won't do it.
 
 Too much alcohol over a long time can seriously damage the liver causing diseases such as hepatitis and cirrhosis.
 
 Brain
 
 Alcohol slows the brain causing changes in judgement and self-control, possibly resulting in accidents.	
Long term heavy drinking damages brain cells.	
 Stomach
 
 Too much alcohol over a short period can cause nausea, vomiting and an irritable stomach.
 Long term drinking can cause illnesses such as gastritis and stomach ulcers.
 Alcohol is damaging in other ways
 	
 It quickly destroys healthy cells, even in small amounts. These cells are replaced, but replacement is limited if regular drinking occurs.	
The body is at greater risk of being physically damaged when a woman has more than three to four standards drinks a day; or when a man has five to six standard drinks a day.Alcohol is particularly dangerous for children. Their livers are smaller and not used to breaking down alcohol
Experts now believe that alcohol is best taken two to three times a week in limited doses. Alcohol can be a big problem
 
 Alcohol causes a lot of society's problems, such as road accidents, physical abuse, and family violence.
Being hooked on alcohol can cause a lot of problems in a person’s life, and be a terrible problem for those around them. As heavy drinkers lose control over their lives, their relationships and work suffer, their lives can be ruined.			
Other people, who are just problem drinkers, lead normal lives and may not drink every day. But when they start drinking they find it hard to stop. They create arguments and get hangovers. Yet they don’t see themselves as having an alcohol problem.  The more some one drinks, the more problems they are likely to have.
And of course, alcohol is expensive.  Buying it leaves less money for necessities.
 No one has to drink alcohol.  Many people don’t.
 It's OK to say NO! Or drink in moderation.
 
 Reproduced with the kind permission of the New Zealand Police Association
 
 
 |  |  |