Home
Get Help Now!!
Contact Us
TREATMENT
Intervention
Alcoholic?
Recovery Now!
Books
SYMPTOMS
CAUSES
EFFECTS
RECOVERY
Spiritual
Detox
Your Questions
Family Issues Parents
Teens
Marriage
Codependence
Depression
Prevention
Programs
DUI
SIGNS
Children
Stories
College Drinking
Definition
Help
Questions
Alcohol Abuse Treatment Ask Joe
Step 1
Step 2
Step 3
Step 4
Try AA
Alanon
ABOUT
Warning Signs
Stop Drinking
Depressed
Liver Disease
Eating Right
Alcohol Detox
Alcohol Level
Addiction
Dry Drunk
The Steps
Naltrexone
Dependence
Disease
Physical Signs
Withdrawal
Alcohol Dependence Issues Binge Drinking
Alcohol Stages
Meetings
Information
Signs of Abuse
FACTS
Treatment Info
Options
12-Step
Centers
Stop Craving
Drugs
Signs of Drugs
Treating
Poisoning
Alcohol Abuse
Alcohol Effects
Cancer
Drug Questions
Alcohol Help
About This Site About Us
Site Search
Site Map
Privacy
Blog
Drug Addiction Information Drug Effects
Crack Addiction
Intervention 2
Counselor
Drug Causes
Teen Drug Use
Drug Questions
Cocaine Rehab
Heroin
NA
Drug Abuse
Reverse Effects
Suboxone
Opiate Detox
Oxycotin
Heroin Use
Drug Addict
More Alcohol Abuse Information Alcohol Rehab
Quit Drinking
Depressed?
Intoxication
Abuse Stories
Addiction
Alcohol Abuse
Teen Alcoholic
Dependence
Stories 2
Intoxicated
Recovery Center
One Drink
I Slept It Off
Why?
Alcohol Family
Alcohol 12 Step
Cure?
Progression
More Stats
How to tell
CBT
Drug Recovery
Drug Treatment
Drug Program
Checklist
Underage
Drugs
Codependency
Warning
Residential
Centers
Teen Stress
What works?
Depressed?
Family Matters
Driving Drunk
Stop Drinking
Drinking
What to look for
and Alcohol
Too Drunk!
Diabetes
10 Signs
Abuse Signs
Human Condition

Subscribe To This Site
XML RSS

Alcohol Rehabilitation

Alcohol Rehabilitation



Alcohol Rehabilitation:

But Officer, I Know I Slept It Off!

Alcohol Rehabilitation may take MUCH longer than you’d expect read below and see just how long it takes:

There is an old folk song that asks the question, “What do you do with a drunken sailor?” The answer was “Put him to bed until he’s sober.”

Bed is probably the best place for someone who has had too much to drink, but when does that person become sober? The answer might surprise you.

We live in Wisconsin, where .08 is the limit for blood alcohol level. That limit does not necessarily mean that people are not impaired at lower levels. Half that limit or maybe less is all it takes. Let’s take a look at one scenario and see just what it takes to “sleep it off.”

Business Against Drunk Drivers Inc. (BADD) published a brochure illustrating the time it takes to “sleep off” (alcoholism detox) a night on the town.

The scenario presented was about a business man having a few drinks after work. The person starts at 6:00 and has two drinks an hour before leaving at 1:00 a.m. Two drinks means the average 1-ounce shot of 100-proof liquor, or a 1.25-ounce shot of 80 proof liquor, or a 12-ounce beer, or a 5-ounce glass of wine. He has the good sense to get a ride, because his alcohol concentration (AC) is .20, a very high level. BADD warns that the level is not unusual, and that most drunk driving arrests are for a level of .175.

By 2:00 a.m. he’s in bed, fighting off the “whirlies.”

Here’s where things get interesting. According to the brochure, his AC at bed time is .190, well over the legal amount. As he begins to “sleep it off” his level at 3:00 a.m. is .175. The average rate that alcohol is eliminated from the blood stream is .015 per hour. Alcoholism detox still has not occured.

An hour later he wakes up with a headache and gets some aspirin, but his blood alcohol level is still .160, way over the limit. By 5:00 a.m., while he’s asleep, the level is .145, and by 6:00 a.m. when his alarm sounds to get up for the day, he rolls out of bed with a level of .130, hardly sober.

He fumbles with his car keys and takes off for work at 7:00, with a blood alcohol level of .115, still drunk. He manages to make it to work by 8:00 and he begins his day legally intoxicated with a .1 level. He is still trying to pull himself together and gets a coffee at 9:00 a.m. and his level measures at .085, still legally intoxicated according to the laws of many states, even though he had his last drink eight hours ago.

At 10:00 he leaves for this first meeting of the day at .07, still under the influence. He is still feeling shaky at 11:00, when his level is at .055 and by noon, he is still under the influence of alcohol at .04, 11 hours after he finished drinking.You probably have had experience with people who come to your place of business smelling of stale booze. It’s not because they had a two martini lunch. They are still clearing the alcohol out of their system from the night before the alcoholism detox hasn’t finished.

American culture has always praised those who could “hold their liquor.” But considering how long it takes to get sober after holding all of that liquor, maybe we should rethink the idea of praising that person.

For more Alcohol Rehabilitation click for Intervention

Alcohol Rehabilitation Alcohol Rehabilitation Alcohol Rehabilitation Alcohol Rehabilitation Alcohol Rehabilitation Alcohol Rehabilitation


HOW TO USE THIS SITE:

This site contains five MAIN pages that EVERYONE should read:



ABOUT…

SYMPTOMS…

CAUSES…

TREATMENT…

RECOVERY…

Read these five pages and learn what you need to know to spot alcoholism in:

Yourself... Your Family... Your Friends... Your Community...

The rest of the pages are there for your reference to explain important topics in more detail.

Finally don’t miss the Spiritual and 12-step sections to fully explore how understanding THE SPIRIT can lead to recovery!