The information in this blog has been designed to help you increase your knowledge of home remedies that may relieve health problems in some cases. This blog is intended as a reference resource only, and not as a substitute for proper and prompt medi cal care.Use this volume to complement, not to replace, any treatment or advice your physician may prescribe or recommend. For best results, obtain your physician's approval before using any methods or remedies listed in this book.

Saturday, August 16, 2008

THE TWO-MARTINI LUNCH

The drinking of alcoholic beverages is a social custom for the great majority of adults in the United States. In moderation this custom may improve circulation, reduce blood pressure, and act as a relatively mild and safe tranquilizer. However, 10 percent of our population have serious drinking problems. These people constitute over 20 percent of all hospitalized patients. They typically suffer from one or more of a set of related serious problems; cirrhosis of the liver, ulcer disease, bleeding from the bowel, premature senility, and vitamin deficiencies are among the most frequent. Sometimes they show signs of severe mental psychosis, and they may exhibit the spectacular “delirium tremens” – the “DT’s” or “the shakes.” They drive automobiles into immovable objects or innocent folks with a frequency that is truly alarming; deaths related to alcohol represent nearly one-half of all deaths in young adult life. Suicide and homicide are frequently related to alcohol use.

Alcohol is high in calories. It may increase obesity, as in a “beer belly,” and it thereby increases other health problems related to obesity. People who drink heavily tend to eat less nutritional food. This can result in a variety of nutritional problems as well as cirrhosis of the liver.

Treatment of the alcoholic continues to be a frustrating, often unsuccessful venture. Within the medical community, enthusiasm for a wide variety of treatment methods waxes and wanes. Non-medical organizations, especially alcoholics Anonymous, enjoy a success rate that is at least equal to that of any “medical” treatment. Associated organizations, such as Al Anon, which work with the families of alcoholics, also show considerable promise. The key elements of these treatments are that they deal with motivated people who truly wish to change, and the treatments continually reinforce the subject’s desire to remain free of alcoholic influence.

When should you seek help? Everyone has a different definition of how much alcohol is too much, and the amount probably is different for different people. You should seek help if you have problems with alcohol, and you should not make excuses for the problems. Face up to them. Here are some of the frequent signals that you need help: a drunken driving citation, an automobile accident after two or more drinks, missing work because of feeling poorly from drinking the night before, a pattern of work absences on Monday mornings, a hospitalization for an alcohol-related problem such as gastritis or upper bowel hemorrhage, inability to function at top efficiency in the afternoon because of a two-martini lunch or its equivalent. If you develop the insight that you have these serious problems and that your situation must be changed, you are a good candidate for successful treatment.

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