Teenagers get drunk using water dressing bandages, what is the impact for the body?

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Had a stir in social media in 2016, it turned out that the "trend" of drinking sanitary cooking water for drunkenness has now spread again among Indonesian teenagers - especially in Central Java. They claimed to do it to taste what it was like to use drugs in a cheaper way.

The effect of the hangover is like being drunk using methamphetamine?

The majority of children who are "hobby" guzzling sanitary napkins are teenagers of their age, which is around 13-16 years. According to them the effect of getting drunk after drinking the decoction is the same as the effect of being drunk from methamphetamine.

Sabu, also known as methamphetamine or crystal meth, is a psychoactive narcotics type Amphetamine Type Stimulants (ATS) that provides a powerful stimulant effect in the brain, creating an euphoric sensation (excessive joy seems to be in the seventh heaven).

It is not yet clear what makes sanitary cooking water can give the effect of drunkenness like a methamphetamine. The local Health Office suspects that certain chemicals in the sanitary napkin might cause it.

The danger is to drink cooking water for cooking

Sanitary cooking water has the potential to cause harm to the body. Because, sanitary napkins are made of materials that are not suitable for consumption, such as paper pulp, polymers (super absorbent polymer /SAP), polyethylene, adhesive substance (adhesive), and chlorine.

Chlorine, for example, is a corrosive chemical that can cause irritation through direct exposure to the skin. Especially when consumed directly or inhaled steam.

These chemical compounds can erode organs and cause irritation to the digestive and respiratory tract.

In addition, various other ingredients contained in sanitary napkins may include types of carcinogens that can trigger cancer if left to accumulate in the body.

Certain chemical compounds may also be able to react with hot temperatures when boiled so that they are potentially dangerous.

Menstrual blood is not for drinking

Even more surprising, a number of children drink stew drinkers claim concocting their drinks by boiling used sanitary napkins, which incidentally still contains blood.

Not many people know that blood is actually poison for the body if taken because it is very rich in iron.

The human body is difficult to rinse out excess iron so that it can potentially cause iron overdose, a condition called hematochromatosis.

Hematochromatosis can cause a variety of problems, including liver damage, fluid buildup in the lungs, dehydration, low blood pressure, and nervous disorders.

Potentially an intermediary for the spread of disease

One thing that might need to be more cautious of this trend is the risk of disease transmission. Because, blood is one medium that mediates the spread of disease.

Many types of diseases can be transmitted through blood exchange contact. For example hepatitis, HIV, and parvovirus B19.

If the menstrual person has a certain infection, or carries a blood-borne virus, this can transmit the disease to other people who drink menstrual blood.

The used sanitary napkins themselves also contain germs and other foreign microbes which are at risk of causing various diseases in people who consume them.

Need further research

Getting drunk using sanitary cooking water is quite a new phenomenon.

That's why the National Narcotics Agency and the Health Office are still investigating the case to uncover the truth of the psychoactive substances in sanitary napkins, including the potential real impact on health.

Drinking a little and once may not immediately endanger health. But the more and more you drink sanitary cooking water, the greater the risk of harm that may occur in the long run.

Teenagers get drunk using water dressing bandages, what is the impact for the body?
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