• Gen Hosp Psychiatry · Jul 2002

    Historical Article

    Alcohol prescription by surgeons in the prevention and treatment of delirium tremens: historic and current practice.

    • Milton Rosenbaum and Teresita McCarty.
    • Department of Psychiatry, University of New Mexico School of Medicine, Albuquerque, NM 87131, USA.
    • Gen Hosp Psychiatry. 2002 Jul 1; 24 (4): 257-9.

    AbstractBeer, other alcohol beverages, and IV alcohol are still used to prevent or treat alcohol withdrawal delirium on surgical services. The history of the use of alcohol by surgeons may play a role in its continued use for withdrawal. In this policy survey 32 inpatient hospital pharmacies were called and asked if alcohol was available, if it was used to treat alcohol withdrawal, and the medical specialties that requested it. Recommendations about the use of alcohol were examined in recent textbooks and from those published early in the twentieth century. One half of the 32 hospitals surveyed had alcoholic beverages available for patient use and eleven hospitals used either package alcohol or IV alcohol in the treatment of alcohol withdrawal. Surgeons used alcohol before anesthesia to help patients tolerate procedures, and the use of alcohol for treatment of alcohol withdrawal still appears in the surgical literature. This preliminary survey indicates that some hospitals still provide beverage alcohol for the treatment of alcohol withdrawal and that surgeons are the specialty ordering alcohol for their patients.

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