Substance-related health problems during rave parties in The Netherlands (1997-2008).

The objective of this study was to describe a 12-year (1997-2008) observation of substance-related incidents occurring at rave parties in the Netherlands, including length of visits to first-aid stations, substances used, and severity of the incidents. During rave parties, specifically trained medic...

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Main Authors: Jan Krul, Matthijs Blankers, Armand R J Girbes
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2011-01-01
Series:PLoS ONE
Online Access:http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC3247283?pdf=render
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spelling doaj-5e598498358b4d6c9591332ae520e0e72020-11-25T01:15:26ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS ONE1932-62032011-01-01612e2962010.1371/journal.pone.0029620Substance-related health problems during rave parties in The Netherlands (1997-2008).Jan KrulMatthijs BlankersArmand R J GirbesThe objective of this study was to describe a 12-year (1997-2008) observation of substance-related incidents occurring at rave parties in the Netherlands, including length of visits to first-aid stations, substances used, and severity of the incidents. During rave parties, specifically trained medical and paramedical personnel staffed first aid stations. Visitors were diagnosed and treated, and their data were recorded using standardized methods. During the 12-year period with 249 rave parties involving about 3,800,000 visitors, 27,897 people visited a first aid station, of whom 10,100 reported having a substance-related problem. The mean age of these people was 22.3+/-5.4 years; 52.4% of them were male. Most (66.7%) substance-related problems were associated with ecstasy or alcohol use or both. Among 10,100 substance-related cases, 515 required professional medical care, and 16 of these cases were life threatening. People with a substance-related problem stayed 20 min at the first aid station, which was significantly longer than the 5 min that those without a substance-related health problem stayed. These unique data from the Netherlands identify a variety of acute health problems related to the use of alcohol, amphetamines, cannabis, cocaine, ecstasy, and GHB. Although most problems were minor, people using GHB more often required professional medical care those using the other substances. We recommended adherence to harm and risk reduction policy, and the use of first aid stations with specially trained staff for both minor and serious incidents.http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC3247283?pdf=render
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Jan Krul
Matthijs Blankers
Armand R J Girbes
spellingShingle Jan Krul
Matthijs Blankers
Armand R J Girbes
Substance-related health problems during rave parties in The Netherlands (1997-2008).
PLoS ONE
author_facet Jan Krul
Matthijs Blankers
Armand R J Girbes
author_sort Jan Krul
title Substance-related health problems during rave parties in The Netherlands (1997-2008).
title_short Substance-related health problems during rave parties in The Netherlands (1997-2008).
title_full Substance-related health problems during rave parties in The Netherlands (1997-2008).
title_fullStr Substance-related health problems during rave parties in The Netherlands (1997-2008).
title_full_unstemmed Substance-related health problems during rave parties in The Netherlands (1997-2008).
title_sort substance-related health problems during rave parties in the netherlands (1997-2008).
publisher Public Library of Science (PLoS)
series PLoS ONE
issn 1932-6203
publishDate 2011-01-01
description The objective of this study was to describe a 12-year (1997-2008) observation of substance-related incidents occurring at rave parties in the Netherlands, including length of visits to first-aid stations, substances used, and severity of the incidents. During rave parties, specifically trained medical and paramedical personnel staffed first aid stations. Visitors were diagnosed and treated, and their data were recorded using standardized methods. During the 12-year period with 249 rave parties involving about 3,800,000 visitors, 27,897 people visited a first aid station, of whom 10,100 reported having a substance-related problem. The mean age of these people was 22.3+/-5.4 years; 52.4% of them were male. Most (66.7%) substance-related problems were associated with ecstasy or alcohol use or both. Among 10,100 substance-related cases, 515 required professional medical care, and 16 of these cases were life threatening. People with a substance-related problem stayed 20 min at the first aid station, which was significantly longer than the 5 min that those without a substance-related health problem stayed. These unique data from the Netherlands identify a variety of acute health problems related to the use of alcohol, amphetamines, cannabis, cocaine, ecstasy, and GHB. Although most problems were minor, people using GHB more often required professional medical care those using the other substances. We recommended adherence to harm and risk reduction policy, and the use of first aid stations with specially trained staff for both minor and serious incidents.
url http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC3247283?pdf=render
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