The Star Late Edition

Be warned of dangers of drinking

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A YOUNG man in his thirties came to see me, desperatel­y wanting to save his marriage. It turned out that his wife had given him an ultimatum that if he didn’t stop drinking, she was going to leave him.

Her ultimatum came like a blow to his solar plexus. He cried uncontroll­ably, desperatel­y wanting help to quit his drinking because he didn’t want to lose his family.

An intense counsellin­g session taught him what steps he had to take to combat his cravings and to quit his addiction to alcohol. The counsellin­g session and a programme for him to follow at home helped him quit without much effort or strain.

It was so rewarding to see him together with his wife a few months later, sober, happy and full of dreams about their future.

About four months later he presented with severe depression. He responded well to treatment but a month later he presented with an unremittin­g cough and a marked loss of weight.

He was diagnosed with TB and put on treatment. He regained his appetite and his strength and all seemed to be well again for this young couple.

Just as he was making a good recovery from his TB, I received a call from his wife that her husband was in hospital after a stroke and that he had lost his speech.

It emerged that the stroke was caused by a heart valve that had been damaged by years of heavy drinking. It would appear that a clot from his damaged valve dislodged, shot to a blood vessel in the brain and led to the stroke.

The three months of sobriety was too little, too late for this young man, who had made such a remarkable recovery from his addiction to alcohol.

What makes this case so unusual is that it is very rare for alcohol to damage one’s organs so soon. I have treated many patients who were addicted to alcohol, but this is the first time that I came across someone so young ending up with such severe complicati­ons from alcohol abuse. It is something one sees in people addicted to alcohol in their fifties.

I could not help but to think about the devastatio­n and damage that alcohol abuse had done not only to him, but to his children and young wife, especially while they were heading for a bright future after he took the brave step to stop his drinking about eight months ago.

As I was writing this story, I received a message from the young man’s wife that he suffered another stroke, and in the early hours of the morning I received the tragic news that he passed away suddenly.

I was shocked beyond words for his poor wife. She was so supportive and full of hope that he would eventually recover.

I fondly remembered the delight in her face when she told me how happy she and her children felt after he gave up drinking. When I called her to convey my condolence­s, she seemed quite composed but I knew that the loss hadn’t quite sunk in.

I only wish he had sought help much earlier.

I would like to urge anyone who has a problem with drinking to seek help to stop his or her drinking immediatel­y and prevent the risk of getting a major illness, such as a stroke, like this young man.

Not even one drink is safe because every drink irreparabl­y damages a few brain cells.

The rising pandemic of alcohol abuse among teenagers throughout the world is largely due to wide-scale advertisin­g that makes alcohol look acceptable and attractive to highly impression­able teenagers.

Unfortunat­ely, our schools and government department­s are not doing enough to educate our children about the dangers of alcohol.

We should debunk the myth that you need a glass of wine or beer to unwind, chill or have fun.

Quite often, just one drink leads to consuming many more, and when that happens, a happy party descends into a huge brawl by highly inebriated people.

The producers and marketeers of alcohol don’t care about the damage their poison is wreaking on their consumers as long as it brings in the lolly.

Educating society and children about the dangers of alcohol, no matter what type, may not end the pandemic, but it’s a start – a start that the whole of society must make if we wish to avoid major catastroph­es caused by the consumptio­n of excessive amounts of alcohol by people of all ages. DR ELLAPEN RAPITI | Kenwyn, Cape Town

 ?? | DAVID RITCHIE ?? JUST one drink is dangerous, and the writer urges anyone with a drinking problem to seek help immediatel­y to prevent their life having a tragic ending. African News Agency (ANA)
| DAVID RITCHIE JUST one drink is dangerous, and the writer urges anyone with a drinking problem to seek help immediatel­y to prevent their life having a tragic ending. African News Agency (ANA)

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