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Pa. man sentenced 8 years later for DUI
CARLISLE, Pa. - A man was sentenced to house arrest for drunken driving and drug charges
eight years after his paperwork somehow got lost in a bureaucratic shuffle, authorities said. Douglas Gast, 33, was belatedly
sentenced Tuesday to 30 days of house arrest for DUI, possessing marijuana and possessing drug paraphernalia
Gast was upset when he received a notice in July that prosecutors wanted to send him to jail, said
defense attorney Gregory Abeln. "He thought this was over with," Abeln said. "Then out of the blue he gets a letter telling
him to come to court."
Gast had originally faced up to 23 months in county prison after he was convicted in 1998. The state
Superior Court denied his appeal the following year. Gast tried to turn himself in after that, but prison officials said they
didn't have the paperwork on his case, Abeln said.
"They had no record of him," Abeln said. "So he got turned away." Abeln said that a probation officer
had told him Gast would be notified by mail about when to report to prison, but he never received that notice.
It turned out that authorities never began the process to commit Gast to jail because the district
attorney's office said it never received official word that his appeal was denied, according to court records. Somehow, Gast's
paperwork resurfaced over the summer, but District Attorney David Freed said he didn't know how it was found. Advances in
technology have made it easier for authorities to track cases more closely, he said.
Gast, who has not been charged with any crimes since his 1997 arrest, could not be reached for comment
Friday because his home telephone number is unlisted. Prosecutors had wanted Gast to spend at least some time in prison. Bayley
placed him under house arrest instead, allowing him to leave only to go to work. "That's a fair resolution," Freed said.
Drunken priest punches cop, jailed
MONTERREY, Mexico (Reuters) - A Mexican priest briefly ended up behind bars after punching a policemen
who caught him driving drunkenly through the streets of the northern city of Monterrey.
Priest Manuel Raul Ortega, who was not wearing clerical dress but was clutching a prayer book when
captured, launched himself at the traffic cop who pulled him over earlier this week.
"The individual became very violent because they were going to tow away his car. He attacked a policeman
and was taken away," said transit department spokesman Hector Lozano on Thursday.
Ortega's papers identified him as a priest. He was released a few hours after his arrest after paying
the fines for his offenses.
Monterrey and Mexico City are in the midst of a tough new drive to clamp down on widespread drunken
driving after tequila and beer-fueled lunches and parties.
11-year-old charged with driving drunk in Alabama
An 11-year-old girl was charged with drunken driving after leading police on a chase at speeds of
up to 100 mph that ended when she flipped the car in an Alabama beach town.
A video camera in the police car captured the look of surprise on the officer's face when he approached
the wrecked car and got a look at the motorist.
The Mobile Press-Register newspaper said the patrolman saw the Chevrolet Monte Carlo speeding
and flashed his lights to signal the driver to stop. Instead, the car sped faster, travelling at up to 100 mph before
sideswiping another vehicle and flipping over in the Gulf Coast town of Orange Beach Alabama, on Tuesday night.
The young driver, who lived nearby in Perdido Key Florida, was treated at a hospital for scrapes and
bruises and released to relatives. Police also charged her with speeding, leaving the scene of an accident and reckless endangerment.
The car belonged to a relative and police were still trying to find out where she got the alcohol.
There was none in the vehicle but her blood alcohol level was over the limit for adult motorists, police told the newspaper.
THE ENQUIRER
MOUNT AUBURN - Climbing a local television station's radio tower drunk got a Walnut Hills man
in a little trouble Saturday, police said.
A WKRC employee called police about 3:40 a.m. to report a man on the roof of the Highland Avenue building
in Mount Auburn. By the time Cincinnati officers arrived, Allen D. Hankins, 31, of Gilbert Avenue in Mount Auburn was on his
way up the station's radio tower.
Police charged Hankins with criminal trespass and disorderly conduct while intoxicated. He was arrested
and jailed briefly until someone posted $1,000 bail.
Alcohol worse for women's health than men's
BY TARA PARKER-POPE. Wall Street Journal
Toasting the new year with an alcoholic beverage is probably good for your health -- if you're
a man. If you're a woman, the impact of that glass of alcohol is far more confusing.
Overall, science shows that for both men and women, drinking a small amount of alcohol each
day is better for you than never drinking at all, and it likely lowers your risk of heart attack, diabetes and mental decline.
But for women, moderate alcohol consumption also carries risks you may not know about.
Even small amounts of alcohol consumption are linked with higher risk for breast cancer. Women
who drive after drinking are at higher risk than men of dying in a car accident, even at similar blood-alcohol concentrations.
And women are at higher risk than men for serious health problems related to alcohol abuse, including liver, brain and heart
damage.
The reasons alcohol appears to affect men and women so differently are complex. Women achieve
higher concentrations of alcohol in the blood and become more impaired than men after drinking equivalent amounts of alcohol,
even when taking into account differences in height and weight. This is likely due to the fact that a woman's stomach empties
more slowly than a man's, giving the body more time to absorb the same amount of alcohol, many doctors say.
Lab studies suggest there may be gender differences in how alcohol affects the response to visual
cues and other tasks related to driving performance, which may explain why it's more risky for a woman to drink and drive.
And alcohol also may alter a woman's natural estrogen levels, which can influence her risk for a number of health concerns.
One of the most troubling effects of alcohol is that even small amounts increase a woman's risk
for breast cancer. A pooled analysis by Harvard researchers of all the data on alcohol and breast cancer shows that a woman
who consumes just two drinks a day has about a 27 percent higher risk of getting breast cancer than a woman who doesn't drink
alcohol.
But it's worth noting that the absolute risk of alcohol consumption to an individual woman is
slight. Consider that the typical 50-year-old woman has a five-year breast-cancer risk of about 2.1 percent -- so two drinks
a day would boost her risk to only about 2.7 percent.
"It's not a huge difference to an individual woman, but it could translate into many thousands
of breast cancers in a year that would not have otherwise occurred," says Walter Willett, epidemiology and nutrition professor
at the Harvard School for Public Health.
Tripping Your Way to Sobriety
'Acid' as a Cure for Alcoholism
By MIKE LEE and APARNAA SESHADRI
You are hooked on alcohol and you want help getting off the booze.
You go to your doctor, and he or she says, "Drop some acid."
That's right. LSD, the infamous drug of choice for many hippies in the 1960s and '70s.
Lysergic acid diethylamide, the drug that caused hallucinations or "tripping," was, of course, outlawed,
giving it immeasurable street cred in its time, before fading away as flower-painted bodies grew into gray-flannel suits.
So, in the 21st century, why would a respected medical doctor even consider prescribing LSD as a wonder
drug to help cure alcoholism?
And will it actually happen?
The answer, like an LSD trip, is elusive, but some in the scientific and medical community are beginning
to discuss the possible merits of acid for this generation.
Erika Dyck, an assistant professor at the University of Alberta, Canada, researches and teaches the
history of medicine.
She raised the issue after studying a series of LSD tests of alcohol-addicted patients carried out
in the 1960s in Saskatchewan. The tests were done by British psychiatrists Humphrey Osmond and John Smythies.
She tells ABC News that two-thirds of the alcoholics stopped drinking for at least 18 months after
receiving one dose of LSD, compared to 25 percent who stopped after group therapy, and 12 percent after individual therapy.
According to Dyck, even Alcoholics Anonymous endorses the LSD research.
Alcoholics Anonymous "felt that one of the major obstacles to joining Alcoholics Anonymous was 'Step
2, admitting that there is a higher power.'"
Even the co-founders of Alcoholics Anonymous, Dyck said, "felt that LSD was the first intervention
that helped many people to reach this step."
According to Rick W in the organization's New York office, one of the founders of Alcoholics Anonymous
"was supportive in a lot of ways in all kinds of research, so he might very well have written something in support. He also
experimented with LSD himself."
Dyck told the Independent newspaper of London, "The LSD somehow gave these people experiences that
psychologically took them outside of themselves and allowed them to see their own unhealthy [behavior] more objectively, and
then determine to change it."
But those Canadian-based experiments in the '60s were widely criticized by others as either unwise
or unreliable.
Amid the growing alarm over LSD abuse by large numbers of young people, the drug, and any potential
good use, was locked outside of the establishment.
Now, some scientists around the world are planning to experiment once again with the effects of LSD
on psychiatric disorders, possibly even revisiting the question of whether acid can help alcoholics.
"There's a lot of renewed interest in psychedelics in general," Robin Carhart-Harris, a researcher
on LSD and psychotherapy at the University of Bristol, in England, said to ABC News.
The Royal College of Psychiatrists in Britain has been discussing the possibility, and Carhart-Harris
tells ABC News that Swiss doctors are planning look into LSD for psychotherapy.
"I certainly think it's an interesting subject scientifically," he said. "I think I've heard the analogy
of a knife before — you can use it for positive means, and for negative means."
Ironically, if LSD had stayed in the controlled environment of research labs in the '60s — and
never hit the streets and mixed into the social cauldron that was swirling out of control in places like San Francisco —
the drug might have evolved as a responsible medical treatment for alcoholism and psychiatric illnesses.
It is an intriguing medical issue that scientists can resume work on only if and when governments are
ready to view acid as a potential solution, not just an old problem.
Red wine can help prevent stroke damage:
By Deborah Charles
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Red wine might work to protect the brain from damage
after a stroke and drinking a couple of glasses a day might provide that protection ahead of time, U.S. researchers reported
on Sunday.
In an effort to better understand how red wine works, the scientists from Johns Hopkins University
fed mice a moderate dose of a compound found in red grape skins and seeds before inducing stroke-like damage.
They discovered that the animals suffered less brain damage than similarly damaged mice who
were not treated with the compound, which is called resveratrol.
"When we pre-treat the animals with the compound orally, then we observe that we have a significant
decrease in the area of stroke damage by about 40 percent," said Sylvain Dore, the lead researcher for the study.
Dore and his research team presented their results from the study, which was funded in part
by the U.S. government, at a Society for Neuroscience conference in Atlanta.
"What is unique about this study is we have somewhat identified what can be the specific mechanism,"
in the wine that is good for health, Dore said. "Here we are building cell resistance against free radical damage."
The study showed that resveratrol increases levels of an enzyme in the brain -- heme oxygenase
-- that was already known to shield nerve cells from damage.
Dore said the beneficial effects associated with drinking a moderate amount of red wine could
be explained by the fact the wine turns on the heme oxygenase anti-oxidant system.
"Red wine has been suggested for the heart. Here what we show is its special effect in stroke
and pre-treatment," Dore said. "It suggests that prophylactic use of wine could work."
The fermentation process in wine-making boosts the concentration of resveratrol, Dore said.
But said more studies are needed to translate the findings from mice into humans.
The amount of wine that must be consumed in order to reap the benefits of the compound will
vary depending on a person's weight and the concentration of resveratrol in the wine. But Dore said it will likely work out
to about two glasses a day.
National family commission in favour of alcohol consumption amendments by
Valerie Fenech, di-ve news
VALLETTA, Malta (di-ve news)-- October 13, 2006--
1325CEST-- The national family commission on Friday praised the recent amendments put forward in Parliament on the selling
of alcohol to children and adolescents.
While the alcohol consumption level of children under the age of 16 is rather
worrying, the current rate in Malta has reached alarming levels. This leads to negative effects on children's health and their
families.
Statistics show that in 2003, crimes related to alcohol amounted to €33 billion in all European states,
while effects of driving under the influence of alcohol amounted to €10 billion.
The Commission believes that
the legal drinking age should be increased to 18, as research shows that legislation is an effective means of reducing alcohol
abuse.
The Commission further urged the amendments to be approved unanimously.
Furthermore, the Commission
emphasised prevention for alcohol abuse especially through education.
Government Survey Confirms:
Our Laws Steer Americans Toward Alcohol Use by SAFER Press
Release (07 Sept, 2006)
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Alcohol use - and abuse - dwarfs marijuana use among all age groups; Statement from Steve Fox, executive director, Safer
Alternative for Enjoyable Recreation (SAFER)
The findings of the 2005 National Survey on Drug Use and Health released today by the U.S. Department of Health and Human
Services simply underscore what we have been saying all along: Our nation's laws are driving people to drink. This, despite
the fact that every objective study ever conducted - including those by the U.S. and Canadian governments - conclude that
marijuana is less harmful, both to the user and to society, than alcohol.
Headlines about teen marijuana use going
down and middle age use going up distract Americans from an obvious, but far more important point: The number of people using
marijuana in this country is dwarfed by the number of people using the far more harmful substance alcohol. Here are just a
few comparisons from the National Survey:
Current (past 30 days) use, Americans aged 12 and older:
Marijuana - 14,626,000 Alcohol - 126,028,000 *Binge
drinkers - 55,090,000 *(five or more drinks at one sitting once during the 30 days)
Current (past
30 days) use, percentage of Americans aged 26 and older:
Marijuana - 4.1% Alcohol - 55.1% Binge drinkers
- 21%
Current (past 30 days) use, percentage of Americans aged 12-17:
Marijuana - 6.8% Alcohol
- 16.5% Binge drinkers - 9.9%
While the figures for adults are staggering - such as the fact that there are
five times as many binge drinking adults over 25 in the country as marijuana users - it is the last one that might be the
most troubling. Almost 50 percent more young Americans have engaged in binge drinking than have used marijuana.
Binge
drinking, aside from potentially leading to social problems such as sexual assault and other acts of violence, can literally
kill young people. Marijuana cannot. Yet our government has helped produce this other statistic found in today's release:
PERCEPTION
OF GREAT RISK, among Americans aged 12-17: "Smoking marijuana once or twice a week" - 55% "Having five or more drinks
once or twice a week" - 38.4%
In fact, our government has done such a good job demonizing marijuana that young people
think smoking marijuana once or twice a week is equally as risky as trying the potentially deadly drug heroin. (Fifty-six
percent of Americans aged 12-17 perceive trying heroin as a great risk.)
As these statistics reflect, our laws and
policies that demonize marijuana and push people toward alcohol are jeopardizing the health of Americans. We must question
- and it is long past time to do so - why we treat two recreational substances so differently. More specifically, we must
question why we prevent adults from making the rational choice to use the less harmful substance. Whether this is influenced
by the fact that the National Beer Wholesalers' Association is by far the most generous contributor to Republicans in Congress
(Source: www.opensecrets.org) is for the media to investigate and the people to decide.
Let me be clear, this is not just about adults; it is about
kids, too. Anyone worried about the message we might send to kids if we make marijuana legal for adults should seriously think
about the consequence of the messages we are sending them right now.
Contact: Steve Fox, SAFER executive director,
(240)-476-7305
~~~
Safer Alternative For Enjoyable Recreation (SAFER) is a Colorado-based non-profit
organization. SAFER's mission is to educate the public about the harmful consequences associated with alcohol, as compared
to the safer - yet illegal - substance: marijuana. For more information about SAFER, visit: www.SAFERchoice.org | |
Study finds no support for claims that alcohol industry targets youth
A Penn State study finds no economic evidence that the alcohol beverage industry targets youth in its
magazine ads, as alleged by critics.
"Results from analyzing magazine characteristics and readership demographics show significant effects
for advertisement price, audience size and adult demographics in magazine alcohol ads, but fail to support claims of targeting
youth," said study author Jon Nelson, professor emeritus of economics at
Penn State University. His findings are published in the July issue of Contemporary Economic Policy.
In 2003, the alcohol beverage industry spent more than $1.6 billion on advertising including $394 million
on ads in magazines. Critics allege that the activities target teens and contribute to social problems associated with underage
alcohol drinking.
Proposals by regulatory and advocacy groups range from a complete ban on alcohol advertising to stricter
limits on ads in media outlets with a very high exposure to youth.
Dr. Nelson reviewed alcohol ads in 28 magazines in 2001-2003 and analyzed them by demographics:
the percentage of youth readers, adult median age, adult median real income, and percentage of adult male readers, and by
magazine characteristics: circulation, single copy sales, content category, annual number of issues, and advertisement cost
per thousand readers.
Alcohol advertising includes beer, wine and spirits. For 2001-2003, the 28 magazines in the
study contained a total of 3,675 alcohol ads, including 652 beer ads, 118 wine ads, and 2,905 distilled spirits ads.
Titles include: Better Homes and Gardens, Car and Driver, ESPN The Magazine, Glamour, People,
Newsweek, Time, Popular Mechanics, Sports Illustrated, Spin, Shape, Self and Vogue. All of the sampled magazines accept alcohol
ads. Some popular youth-oriented magazines such as Seventeen or YM that do not accept alcohol ads were not included in the
study.
For 14 of the 28 magazines, the percentage of youth readers equals or exceeds 20 percent. Four
magazines in the study are among the most widely read magazines among teens: People Weekly, Rolling Stone, Sports Illustrated
and Vibe.
"Beer advertisers favor magazines with more young adults, male readers and larger adult audiences,
but not teens," said Dr. Nelson. "Spirits producers prefer magazines with more young adults, male readers and larger adult
audiences but not teens; they also favor magazines with lower costs per advertisement."
"In terms of content, automobile magazines have the highest average percentage of youth readership,
although the number of alcohol ads in this category is quite small. Entertainment and music magazines have the second highest
percentage of youth readers, the lowest mean adult age and a large number of alcohol ads," he added.
However, the study notes that the young adult population (ages 21-34) is 50 percent larger than
the underage youth population (ages 12-20). The alcohol industry targets young adults through magazine ads because young adults
drink more alcohol than older adults and have not yet established brand loyalties.
Nelson's analysis found that alcohol advertisers have the strongest preference for men's style
and sports magazines, followed by entertainment and music magazines. Advertising decisions are influenced more by the size
of the adult audience and the price charged for an ad placement, rather than the size of the youth readership.
"The percentage of youth readers is not significant in any of the economic regressions, regardless
of the model," Nelson adds. "Policymakers would be well advised to turn their attention to other aspects of youth drinking
behaviors, rather than decisions made in the market for advertising space."
Health Tip: How Much Alcohol is Safe?
(HealthDay News) -- As a general rule of thumb, one alcoholic drink per day for women and two per
day for men are considered moderate and safe amounts, the National Institute on Alcohol Abuse and Alcoholism says.
But some people of legal age shouldn't drink at all, including pregnant women, people who use high-speed
machinery, those who take certain medications, and recovering alcoholics, the institute says.Examples of a single alcoholic
drink include a 12-ounce bottle of beer or wine cooler, a 5-ounce glass of wine, or one 1.5-ounce glass of distilled spirits,
the agency says.
No Link Between Cholesterol, Suicide in Alcoholics
(HealthDay News) -- Rebutting previous research, a new study refutes the idea that low cholesterol
levels can help predict alcoholics' suicide risk.
While this study of 110 alcoholic psychiatric patients found no link between cholesterol levels and
suicide attempts, it did identify a "profile" of alcoholic patients at risk for suicide. The findings appear in the March
issue of Alcoholism: Clinical & Experimental Research.
"Up to 7 percent of alcoholic patients die from suicide, and about one-third of these patients attempt
suicide at least once in life," study corresponding author Eberhard A. Deisenhammer, an associate professor of psychiatry
at Innsbruck Medical University in Austria, said in a prepared statement."However, since many alcoholics
are reluctant to seek treatment for their problem, a significant portion of potentially suicidal alcoholic patients go undetected.
We wanted to investigate if elevated serum cholesterol levels could serve to identify these individuals early enough to help
them," he said.
While recent studies have found that individuals with lower cholesterol levels may be more likely to
either attempt or complete suicide, there is no firm evidence linking cholesterol and suicide risk.For
their study, Deisenhammer and his colleagues interviewed and took blood samples from the 110 study volunteers grouped according
to whether or not they had attempted suicide during their lifetime. The blood samples were checked for total cholesterol,
high-density lipoprotein cholesterol, low-density lipoprotein cholesterol and triglycerides.
The researchers found no association between cholesterol levels and suicide attempts. However, they
did identify a profile of alcoholics at risk for suicide. Those who had attempted suicide were younger, more often smokers,
had more frequently co-abused benzodiazepines (used to relieve anxiety and insomnia), and scored higher on the two standard
tests, the Montgomery and Asberg Depression Rating Scale (MADRS) and the MADRS "suicidal thoughts" item."Maybe
future studies will show that there are subgroups of patients for which cholesterol may be useful as a biological suicide
marker," Deisenhammer said. "Until that time, doctors and relatives of alcoholics should consider the possibility that their
patient/husband/colleague may be, or become, suicidal. Until we have easily applicable biological risk markers at our disposal,
they will need to assess suicide risk primarily through conversation."
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