Non-alcoholic energy drinks may pose 'high' health risks

January 26, 2011

Non-alcoholic energy drinks may pose 'high' health risks

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"Energy drinks have become enmeshed in the subculture of partying," the paper says. Credit: UMD-SPH

Highly-caffeinated energy drinks – even those containing no alcohol – may pose a significant threat to individuals and public health, say researchers at the University of Maryland School of Public Health and Wake Forest University School of Medicine.

In a new online commentary in the Journal of the American Medical Association (JAMA), they recommend immediate consumer action, education by health providers, voluntary disclosures by manufacturers and new federal labeling requirements.

"Recent action to make pre-mixed alcoholic unavailable was an important first step, but more continued action is needed," says University of Maryland School of researcher Amelia Arria, who directs the Center on Young Adult Health and Development. "Individuals can still mix these highly caffeinated energy drinks with alcohol on their own. It is also concerning that no regulation exists with regard to the level of caffeine that can be in an energy drink."

Arria and co-author Mary Claire O'Brien, associate professor of emergency medicine at Wake Forest University School of Medicine, alerted various state attorneys general to the risks of alcoholic energy drinks starting in 2009, actions that culminated last November in actions against Four Loko and similar products by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration and the Federal Trade Commission.

HEALTH RISKS

The JAMA paper cites three public health concerns surrounding all packaged energy drinks containing moderate to high levels of caffeine:

  • Consumers often mix alcohol and energy drinks: "Energy drinks have become enmeshed in the subculture of partying," the paper says. "The practice of mixing energy drinks with alcohol – which is more widespread than generally recognized – has been linked consistently to drinking high volumes of alcohol per drinking session and subsequent serious alcohol-related consequences such as sexual assault and driving while intoxicated… Research has demonstrated that individuals who combine energy drinks with alcohol underestimate their true level of impairment."
  • Caffeine can have adverse health effects in susceptible individuals: "Therefore continued public health awareness regarding high levels of caffeine consumption, no matter what the beverage source, in sensitive individuals is certainly warranted," the researchers write.
  • Energy drink use appears to be associated with alcohol dependence and other drug use: More research is needed to clarify the possible mechanisms underlying the associations that have been observed in research studies.
RECOMMENDATIONS

The commentary recommends several "proactive steps to protect public health:"

  • Health care professions should inform their patients of the risks of consuming highly caffeinated energy drinks;
  • Individuals should educate themselves about those risks;
  • Manufacturers should warn consumers about the risks of mixing their products with ;
  • Regulatory agencies should require energy drink manufacturers to disclose caffeine content on product labels and display appropriate warnings.

More information: The JAMA paper, The 'High' Risk of Energy Drinks is available online: http://jama.ama-as … 011.109.full

Provided by University of Maryland search and more info website

2.4 /5 (8 votes)  

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Simonsez
Jan 26, 2011

Rank: 5 / 5 (1)
At least they aren't trying to legislate against non-alcoholic energy drinks... yet.
Bootless
Jan 26, 2011

Rank: 5 / 5 (2)
The drinks themselves are not the risks, but the associated behaviors are? So what?
Quantum_Conundrum
Jan 26, 2011

Rank: 2.3 / 5 (6)
Energy drink use appears to be associated with alcohol dependence and other drug use: More research is needed to clarify the possible mechanisms underlying the associations that have been observed in research studies.


If someone is dumb enough to use one drug or alcoholic substance then they are likely to be dumb enough to use another drug too. It's that simple.

"I'll try anything once."- fools motto.
panorama
Jan 26, 2011

Rank: 3 / 5 (2)
"I'll try anything once."- fools motto.

I prefer, "Too much is always better than not enough."

Also, what is with people and putting this stuff in their alcohol? What's wrong with just enjoying the alcohol? For me a great drink involves two things, Maker's Mark and Water (some frozen, and a drop of liquid water)
Au-Pu
Jan 26, 2011

Rank: 5 / 5 (2)
Panorama.

Why add the water?
fmfbrestel
Jan 26, 2011

Rank: 4.8 / 5 (6)
yeah, and ice cream is associated with hot days, but no ones blaming global warming on ice cream. Such reactionary bull-sh*t.

Caffeine is addictive, we have known this for some time. So are most illegal drugs, alcohol, and nicotine. Some people are generally more susceptible to addictions, it is not surprising that people with alcohol or drug addictions would also be addicted to caffeine. But that doesn't mean you make caffeine illegal, it means you need to better treat addiction generally.
fmfbrestel
Jan 26, 2011

Rank: 5 / 5 (9)
Our society fails at treating addictions. We fail so much that we barely even try anymore, we just make the addictive substance illegal and demonize the addicts. Sad.
Quantum_Conundrum
Jan 26, 2011

Rank: 1.8 / 5 (5)
Our society fails at treating addictions. We fail so much that we barely even try anymore, we just make the addictive substance illegal and demonize the addicts. Sad.


Maybe you sould realize that the making the substance illegal is intended to help people quit addictions, and protect non-addicts from the violence and accidents caused by addicts, by making the substance harder to aquire.
barakn
Jan 26, 2011

Rank: 4.4 / 5 (9)
If someone is dumb enough to use one drug or alcoholic substance then they are likely to be dumb enough to use another drug too. It's that simple.

"I'll try anything once."- fools motto.

And that's why after my first beer in 1987, I immediately became addicted to cocaine, meth, and heroin. Friggin idiot.
Expiorer
Jan 27, 2011

Rank: not rated yet
Too much money also may pose high health risks.
kevinrtrs
Jan 27, 2011

Rank: 3.8 / 5 (5)
Spending too much time on the internet is a high health risk.....
stealthc
Jan 27, 2011

Rank: 4 / 5 (4)
Time to stock up on energy drinks. I can get them for $17 a flat (of 24 cans). I guess I need to grab a whole skid of them.

What's the deal with the damned nanny state telling us what we can and cannot put in our bodies? I'll pass on their charity just for the freedom to be my own master. I'm tired of being treated like a child in diapers by them.

Breathing in air, and exhaling co2 can be a health risk.

And being a fear monger can deprive people of their dignity and basic human rights.... who else here is tired of being told what to do by these scientists and pompous politicians using science (based on either fact or junk) to tell us all how we should live our lives?
Blakut
Jan 27, 2011

Rank: 5 / 5 (2)
Our society fails at treating addictions. We fail so much that we barely even try anymore, we just make the addictive substance illegal and demonize the addicts. Sad.


Maybe you sould realize that the making the substance illegal is intended to help people quit addictions, and protect non-addicts from the violence and accidents caused by addicts, by making the substance harder to aquire.


Yes, because addicts would be violent when the legal to find substance would be cheap and easy to acquire. I say that if drugs would be legal, hard drug addicts would die quicker by theyr own hands, with no extra damage to the others (drugs would be cheap and easy to find), the government would tax the habit, and those that drink and smoke tobacco legally would have one more excuse: at least it's not heroin! :P
Eikka
Jan 27, 2011

Rank: 5 / 5 (2)
Energy drinks are not "highly caffeinated". The level of caffeine per 100 ml is typically about 1/3 - 1/2 of that in regular coffee.

Google finds these figures:
Red Bull 12 oz: 80.0 mg
Coffee (drip) 8 oz: 115-175 mg

If you're so worried about these high levels of caffeine, you have to ban coffee first, and coffee based drinks.
Eikka
Jan 27, 2011

Rank: not rated yet
Besides, all this hoo haa is just a knee-jerk reaction to a new cultural problem: kids drinking too much and taking caffeine in one form or another to be able to party more.

Ban energy drinks, and kids will simply drink coffee, or pop cofitabs. Even tea gives you massive amounts of caffeine when eaten dry. You'd have to get rid of all of them, and you still haven't solved the real problem.

The real problem is: why do kids want to drink so much?
fmfbrestel
Jan 27, 2011

Rank: 5 / 5 (3)

Maybe you sould realize that the making the substance illegal is intended to help people quit addictions, and protect non-addicts from the violence and accidents caused by addicts, by making the substance harder to aquire.


I fully realize what the intent of making the substance illegal is, we just fail at it. Making the substance illegal often does nothing to limit the availability and only serves to strengthen an already strong black market.

The criminalizing of addictive and dangerous substances always has very noble and worthy intentions, but fails miserably in achieving those intentions.
Javinator
Jan 27, 2011

Rank: 5 / 5 (3)
has been linked consistently to drinking high volumes of alcohol per drinking session


Correlation, not causation. Obviously they've been linked to high volumes of alcohol consumption. It's not like a good scotch or something people just sip on for the taste. People who mix energy drinks with booze are typically younger and they typically do it when at a party/bar (ie. places where they will be drinking high volumes of alcohol anyways.)

subsequent serious alcohol-related consequences such as sexual assault and driving while intoxicated


Which are caused by alcohol without energy drink influence as well...

I'm with fmfbrestel:

Such reactionary bull-sh*t.
eigenbasis
Jan 27, 2011

Rank: not rated yet
Energy drinks are great!! How else am I going to stay up till 4am doing graduate physics work?! ...and party till 4am when I have the time :-)
CORD
Jan 27, 2011

Rank: 5 / 5 (1)
This is the most ignorant article I've ever had the displeasure of reading. Just because someone has caffeine in their alcoholic beverage does not force that person to drink and drive, if your going to drink and drive then by god your going to drink and drive I highly highly doubt that by adding caffeine to the mix makes people more susceptible to violent or criminal behavior. Everyone knows the negative effects of Alcohol, Caffeine, and Tobacco but they CHOOSE to partake of those substances. Isnt that what our country was founded on, FREEDOM OF CHOICE??
trekgeek1
Jan 27, 2011

Rank: not rated yet
Energy drinks are not "highly caffeinated". The level of caffeine per 100 ml is typically about 1/3 - 1/2 of that in regular coffee.

Google finds these figures:
Red Bull 12 oz: 80.0 mg
Coffee (drip) 8 oz: 115-175 mg

If you're so worried about these high levels of caffeine, you have to ban coffee first, and coffee based drinks.


I was going to say the same thing. Even a large energy drink like Monster is no worse than two cups of coffee or a couple of standard soda's. It says right on the can "limit 3 cans per day". You can poison yourself by drinking too much water. We need to stop trying to protect people from themselves. All you have to do is print the recommended dosage on the package, after that, it's up to the individual.
Skeptic_Heretic
Jan 29, 2011

Rank: not rated yet
Which are caused by alcohol without energy drink influence as well...

I'm with fmfbrestel:
Such reactionary bull-sh*t.

I'm with you as well.

Funny how these studies never even look at the number 1 alcoholic caffinated drink:

Irish Coffee. A staple in most high class bar menus.
PPihkala
Jan 30, 2011

Rank: not rated yet
If they are concerned that people drive after exiting bars while being intoxicated, make it mandatory to leave your car keys to the doorman and you can get them back only when you can give clean breath analyzer test. So if you leave sober, you can drive. If intoxicated, you need to come back to reclaim your keys after you have sobered up. Not a perfect system, but would restrict a lot of accidental drunk driving while leaving a bar.
Justsayin
Jan 30, 2011

Rank: not rated yet
The nanny state raising its ugly head.

"Recent action to make pre-mixed alcoholic energy drinks unavailable was an important first step, but more continued action is needed,"

All in the name of saving us from ourselves.
panorama
Jan 31, 2011

Rank: not rated yet
Panorama.

Why add the water?

It brings out flavors, even though it's "on the rocks" I generally don't like to let any ice melt during consumption.
Rank 2.4 /5 (8 votes)
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