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Nurses Denounce Energy Drinks

Nurses Denounce Energy Drinks

Dorsey Griffith / Mcclatchy Newspapers

May 17, 2008

SACRAMENTO, Calif. — Today’s drug of choice among teens may be caffeine, perfectly legal and packaged in an aluminum can with a catchy name like Bawls or Amp or Hype.

Ask a group of Sacramento, Calif., McClatchy High School students what they’re drinking and they’ll shout out their favorite energy drinks:

“Monster!”

“Rockstar!”

“Boo Koo!”

“Go Girl!”

Or stop by Nugget Market in Davis, Calif., on a Wednesday morning and witness adolescents drinking Red Bulls and Monsters before heading to Oliver Wendell Holmes Junior High School, where the drinks have been banned from campus.

In the past 12 months, the California Poison Control System has handled 26 calls about dangerous reactions to energy drinks in kids, most of them ages 14 and 15. In all, 15 young people landed in emergency rooms with “shakiness, tremors, dizziness, nausea, vomiting, agitation, increased heart rate or high blood pressure,” said Judith Alsop, director of poison control’s Sacramento Division.

And it’s not just teenagers who are drawn to the drinks, which typically contain two to three times the caffeine of a regular soda and nearly as much sugar, plus herbal ingredients such as caffeine-containing guarana.

“I am seeing kids drinking them on the elementary school campus,” said Patty Mancuso, a past president of the California School Nurses Organization and a school nurse in Redding who recently warned parents about the drinks. “What we see are kids who come to school who have a lot of caffeine in their system. They get jittery and they have poor behavior.”

It’s not known how much of the $6.2 billion energy drink industry in the United States can be attributed to sales to adolescents and teens.

John Sicher, editor and publisher of Beverage Digest, which tracks beverage sales, said most energy drink consumers are young adults.

“I am sure there are some young people who try it, but that is not where the growth or most of the consumption is.”

Nevertheless, kids’ use of the drinks has concerned school officials and health advocates.

Derek Brothers, principal at Holmes Junior High, decided last year to prohibit the drinks on campus after learning that some students were consuming several before school and others were buying six-packs and selling the cans for a profit on campus.

The problem was most pronounced on Wednesdays, when school starts at 9:30 a.m. — more than an hour later than normal. The schedule gives kids ample time to shop for their favorite drinks and drink them down before the first bell.

Brothers teamed with Nugget Market manager Lance Benton, who agreed to prohibit students from purchasing more than one drink per person before school.

“The last thing a second period teacher needs is kids who have had five energy drinks,” Benton said.

Last Wednesday, about three dozen Holmes students were at Nugget, many of them with cold energy drinks in hand.

Among them: T.J. Rivers, a 13-year-old eighth-grader. “It tastes good, and it keeps me awake in class,” he said. “It’s like morning coffee to me.”

By 9:15 a.m. classmate Jake Spinks, also 13, said he already had consumed a Rockstar Juiced Guava and a Red Bull (for a total of about 240 milligrams of caffeine), the equivalent of about three cups of brewed coffee.

“I’m feeling great,” Spinks said with a grin.

The seventh-grader acknowledged, however, that the drinks can make him jumpy and unruly in class.

“I get obnoxious, really hyper,” he said. “My parents get mad because I get sent to the office a lot.”

Curious to know whether what she was seeing in her own district in Redding was happening statewide, Mancuso queried other school nurses in California. Several said yes and offered their own anecdotes.

Sjaan Buck, head nurse at the 2,800-student John Burroughs High School in Burbank, said she has sent three kids to the hospital by ambulance in the past year because of side effects from caffeine in energy drinks. Two students experienced tachycardia (rapid or irregular heart rate).

The other student “had two doughnuts for breakfast and then one or two Monsters and he got so anxious that he hyperventilated to the point where he literally couldn’t move,” Buck said.

She said she’s seen similar reactions in students who have consumed too many espressos.

“It’s a sign of the times,” she sighed. “Kids don’t see rest and healthful eating as a way to have more energy.”

Energy drink labels often state that they are not recommended for children, but sales of the drinks are not restricted by age as are products that contain tobacco and alcohol.

Nutrition experts who have studied the drinks’ contents argue that while there is no good evidence they boost vitality or stamina as claimed, neither is there documented proof that they pose a significant threat.

“Caffeine in and of itself is not a harmful substance, but if you are not used to it or you take it in large amounts it can be considered dangerous,” said Mark Kantor, professor of food science and nutrition at the University of Maryland. “I just don’t see any reason why they should be drinking it.”

© YellowBrix 2008


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    minnie

    3 months ago

    2 comments

    I think children under the age of sixteen shouldnt b able to buy them due to the large amount of caffiene, and the side effects of too much...

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    pumpkinbugaboo

    4 months ago

    2 comments

    i have a child that was diagnosed at the age of 2 with being allergic to sugar he's 15 now he use to get terribly mean and out of control now they want to put these drinks out for the youth it was only for long distance runners i believe now it's o.k in this day and age to just hand a child a (deadly weapon )tha's ridiculous!!!!!!!!!

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    frankiecash

    4 months ago

    82 comments

    some of these drinks are just terrible tasting. I do drink them to keep me going when the coffee just stops working. I see kids drinking them all the time. Dont they know that they dont need them with the energy they already posess.

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    bambam05

    4 months ago

    2 comments

    No kid should be drinking any enerygy drink,I'm 37 years old and it makes me sick . Don't get me wrong I still drink them they are like a drug.

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    thunderwitch

    4 months ago

    4 comments

    Caffeine plus sugar in 14 yr old brain equals x in brain of 34 yr old man

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    straigca

    4 months ago

    2 comments

    It was crazy to me to see this article on here because there was a huge article about it it our Sunday paper. I live in Mississippi and many people think only "rich" people have access to energy drinks but that is not the case. I think many parents may not even realize that their kids know what these energy drinks are and that they have access to them.

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    lana1

    4 months ago

    4 comments

    great article!

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    tonyaufken

    4 months ago

    4 comments

    I think these things should have an age limit on them. I personally don't have any children but I imagine if your a parent, it has to be hard to watch your kids 24-7, especially if your at work and your kids are at school. There could be a grocery store within walking distance of school or even home and be that easy for the children to buy so I believe it will definately have to be a group effort to stop the consumption of energy drinks. Maybe they should even teach in school how bad they can be, just like drugs and drinking.

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    holisticnurse

    4 months ago

    2 comments

    I think this is yet another opportunity for parents to blame the government and the schools/teachers for not making their own children healthy, well-behaved, & learning. Of course this is not meant for children & young adolescents. Does this mean it should be regulated, NO! Where are the parents?!? Who lets their kid "hang around" a grocery or convenience store at that age ,& who do you think gives them the money? (They obviously don't have a "real" job at that age!!) It is the parents' job to teach their kids about this and regulate it, not someone else. Yes, I do use drinks like this, Rockstar-sugar free. I know enough about how much caffiene & other supplements are in them and how it affects my body to know that I need only drink one per day. I do not drink coffee or any other sodas, so this is the only caffiene I get, usually.

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    nurz4life

    4 months ago

    80 comments

    It just goes to show you that you the FDA is run by the many legal drug pushers and you have to really read between the lines as new products/drugs are produced for our consumption.

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    mariej_prickett

    4 months ago

    2 comments

    The companies that market these beverages are within the legal limits- no age limits, unfortunately. Atleast there are age restrictions on cigarettes. If adolescents want something bad enough or in other words, are hooked on a product, the kids are smart enough to find ways to get their fix-one way or another (Find money "lying around", hit up a friend, have an older person purchase their goods, etc...). Caffiene addiction should not be the only concern regarding these energy drinks; what about the sugar content that threatens weight gain as well as future health problems and also the carbonation- citric and phosphoric acids that erode tooth enamel.

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    colelynn

    4 months ago

    2 comments

    I totally agree i think it should be banned to children under 18. I think as they get older they will only look for something that gives them that high again such as drugs.

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    lululaura

    4 months ago

    88 comments

    I drank one of these today ay work

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    misslayla

    4 months ago

    4 comments

    If you look at the price of the energy drinks I am shocked that kids can afford to drink to or 3 a day. They are between 3 and 6 dollars a piece and it would take more than a weekly allowance to be able to keep up with type of trend. This is the parents responsibilty 10 fold. Where do kids get the money? Parents. Why are kids allowed the time to go to the grocery in the AM. Parents and who will be the first to blame the grocery store or the manufacturer--The same parents. I have a 14 year old and a 12 year old. Can I prohibit this every time and say that an energy drink shall not ever pass their lips? NO. But can I prevent it from becoming a habit? YES. Should I be held accounbtable if something did happen? YES and it is the parents responsibilty to make sure that their kids are in a decent frame of mind before being let go for 8 hours at public school. It is not a daycare and these kids that are all jumpy and hyper are also going to crash and be irritable and tired in a few hours. many reasons above why I am glad that I am not a teacher but have a respect for them that cannot be expressed in words.

  • Clint

    cmacleod

    4 months ago

    4 comments

    Caffeine is a drug, but I wonder if the kids are really drinking these for the "buzz", or more for the popularity as well as the fact they probably do feel tired and out of energy. Scientists have been saying for years that our society doesn't allow for enough rest and sleep, and when you're talking about a growing child, who is also having to do several hours of homework at night plus extracurriculars, then have to be back into school at 7 or 8 am, well, yeah they probably are tired! I know more than one time that these drinks have gotten me home after a 12 or 16 hour shift and having to drive to get home...Yeah I think its a sign of the times, but let's don't give all the credit to "unhealthy behavior patterns", let's look at what we ask out of people in our society...

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