Planning for safer drinking
19 December 2006
Planning for safer drinking
With the festive season upon us, Bay of Plenty District Health Board’s Community Alcohol and Drug team has some safer drinking advice to offer.
Leading up to the
social occasion
• Eat substantial meals on the
day, and especially plan to eat dinner before you head out
at night. Ideally, include food that’s filling such as
pasta, bread, potatoes or rice.
• Plan ahead and
prepare to eat your dinner a little earlier to avoid you
running out of time, or losing the motivation to cook before
you head out.
• Remember that food will help to
soak up the alcohol content. Conversely, you are more
likely to get intoxicated very quickly on an empty stomach,
and increase the probability of you vomiting and feeling
sick.
• Drink plenty of fluids before the event,
preferably water. Water helps dilute the alcohol in your
system. It also helps to prevent hangovers.
• Do
not drink alcohol whilst you are getting ready/dressed to go
out. Instead, sip on water. Have your first alcoholic
drink when you are out.
• Make a plan on your
upper limit of alcohol intake during the evening. Perhaps
buy a certain number of pre-mixed drinks to take with you.
This will help you keep a tally of your drinks.
•
Get up early on the day of the event, and have a full
day’s activities. This will ensure that you are naturally
tired later in the evening, so going home early to bed seems
more appealing than going on into town at midnight.
•
If appropriate, plan to be the sober driver for your
friends, family or partner. This should ensure that you do
not drink at all, or drink only one or two units of alcohol.
At the event
• Make your first drink of
the evening a non-alcoholic drink (an orange juice or
‘lemon lime and bitters’). Ease into the social
occasion without having to rely on alcohol.
•
Pour your own drinks. If others continually top up your
glass, you will be unable to keep track of the number of
drinks you’ve had. Likewise, avoid having others mix
drinks with spirits (vodka, rum) for you, as you will be
unable to accurately gauge how much alcohol is in each
drink. This is especially true the more intoxicated you
become, as you may not be able to taste it.
•
Alternate every second drink with a non-alcoholic drink. If
at a bar, having a ‘lemon lime and bitters’ this comes
typically in a bottle, which will make you feel like you are
holding a beer or RTD, and other’s won’t even notice the
difference.
• Dilute your drinks. If you usually
drink white wine, make it a ‘white wine spritzer’ (white
wine with soda water or lemonade).
• Drink
low-alcohol drinks.
• Whenever you go to the
bar/kitchen, order a glass of tap water and drink it on the
spot. This will help to keep you well hydrated, lowering
your intoxication levels (you’ll feel more ‘with it’)
and will again fight that looming hangover.
•
Don’t gulp - sip. Put down your drink between sips.
However, avoid this if you are out in public or at a bar as
this can leave you open to having your drink spiked.
•
Savour the taste of the drink, rather than the
effect.
• If there is food available at the
event, nibble on this. This will help keep food in your
stomach to help soak up the alcohol and minimise your
intoxication.
• Avoid eating very salty food such
as chips or salted peanuts as these will make you thirsty
and will make you want to drink more.
• If there
is no food at the event, pop out and grab a sandwich or
burger from a local shop.
• Ensure you have a
support person at the occasion who knows you are keeping to
a safe drinking plan. This person can give you
encouragement and support throughout the
night/occasion.
• Avoid activities at the event
that focus on drinking (such as drinking games, wine
tasting). Keep busy with other games (pool, darts, cards,
board games), play with the kids, or busy yourself in the
kitchen.
• Avoid rounds/shouts with groups of
friends.
• Avoid having shots with friends. If
friends offer a shot, politely decline.
•
Remember that you have the right to be able to say
no.
• f you are at a friend’s house (party,
summer barbeque), make a hot drink, and offer to make a hot
drink for anyone else (you might be surprised at how many
other’s accept your offer of a tea or hot chocolate).
• Plan to leave at a certain time, and simply
leave when this time rolls around.
• Plan a
legitimate reason to leave the event early. For example,
plan to have to get up for something exciting or adventurous
in the morning.
When you get home
• Drink
a couple of glasses of water before you go to bed. This
will help to fight any hangover.
• Eat some food
(sandwich, toast, leftovers) before you go to bed. Avoid
eating anything that takes time to make (fried food, pies in
the oven), in case you fall asleep while you wait. Many
house fires begin this way.
• The next day, take
the time to reflect on how well you feel (no hangover), and
make a point of going out and enjoying the day to the
full.
ENDS