Medical experts warn young men most at risk this Christmas
EMERGENCY doctors at Brisbane’s largest hospital are pleading with young men to take care of themselves and their mates, as they prepare for an influx of booze and peer pressure related injuries.
Local
Don't miss out on the headlines from Local. Followed categories will be added to My News.
EMERGENCY doctors at Brisbane’s largest hospital are pleading with young men to take care of themselves and their mates, as they prepare for an influx of booze and peer pressure related injuries.
Emergency specialist at Royal Brisbane and Women’s Hospital’s (RBWH) Dr David Rosengren said as many as 1500 men aged 18-25 were likely to present to Royal Brisbane and Women’s Hospital (RBWH) Emergency Department over the coming month.
Around half of them would have an alcohol-related injury.
“But doing something really stupid to impress your mates suddenly doesn’t seem so great when you’re in here with us, and we have to tell your distraught mother you may never walk again,” Dr Rosengren said.
While road fatalities and accident trauma will always factor high on the list of emergency presentations during party season, young men are the most likely to end up injured after binge drinking with mates.
“It can start with some guy saying to his mates ‘hold my beer’, yet sadly it ends up here,” Dr Rosengren said.
“We’ve treated young guys who’ve broken their necks jumping from roofs into pools or fallen drunk into campfires.
“We’ve removed limbs from people who’ve had motorboats reverse over them. We’ve seen head injuries and extraordinary fractures in people thrown from moving vehicles.
“We’ve seen young men survive drowning only to need around the clock care.
“We’ve worked through the night to try and save people who’ve arrived smashed to pieces after falling from balconies.
“You name it, we’ve seen it. The scope and severity of injuries varies of course, but once you’ve maimed your body like this, or worse, maimed someone else’s, you can never go back.”
From Christmas Eve 2017 to January 2, 2018, a total of 2277 people presented to RBWH’s Emergency Department, including 176 on Christmas Day, 223 on Boxing Day and another 209 on New Year’s Eve.
New Year’s Day proved the busiest across the campaign period, with 267 presentations.
“Things like glassing attacks and coward punches or young men and women kicked out of bars for drunken behaviour – absolutely senseless violence,” Dr Rosengren said.
“If you could see the tragedy we see, if you knew what it was like to have to explain your injuries to the people who love you most in this world, or if you could experience the pain they feel when they’re waiting to find out if you’re going to be okay, you’d think twice before taking up your mate’s stupid dare.
“We all have families here at RBWH – everyone does – but it just makes it so much harder to see families ripped apart by avoidable accidents when they should be celebrating and spending time together.”