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Wednesday, 8 December, 1999, 14:37 GMT
The real dangers of the millennium
With just a few weeks left to the big Y2K, UK emergency planners are now more worried about salmonella than failing computer chips.
As well as the risk of food poisoning from dodgy cowboy caterers on New Year's Eve, they are also concerned by the dangers of hypothermia and even an escalation in domestic violence. Out cold Hypothermia - a lowering of the body's core temperature - can be lethal. Doctors are worried that alcohol-fuelled celebrations could turn to tragedy if people aren't careful.
Hypothermia occurs when the body loses more heat than it can produce. New Year temperatures vary between a chilly 4C and a freezing -1C. Wind chill can take that temperature down even further. For example, at 0C, a 40kph (25mph) wind causes the body to feel an equivalent temperature of -16C. Warning symptoms of hypothermia include violent shivering, drowsiness and slow mental responses.
But victims of hypothermia may not even realise the danger they could be in. Alcohol and excitement can conspire to create an illusion of warmth, when in fact the body's core temperature is about to drop to danger levels. "Fall asleep in that state and you have real problems," says GP Dr Martin Willis, who runs a busy inner city practice in London. "The victim may quite simply not wake up again. So if you're with someone who's the worse for drink, make sure they're not - quite literally - out cold." Warm bugs Environmental health experts are more worried about the food we will eat on the night. One concern is the possibility that fly-by-night food vendors will take advantage of the celebrations, without paying proper regard to food hygiene rules.
The two worst risk areas are mixing cooked and uncooked foods, cooking food too far in advance and leaving food out for too long before eating it.
"People often pull food out of the fridge to make room for drink. That's just asking for trouble, because the warm food acts like a magnet for nasty bacteria," says Allison Stratford, environmental health manager at Waverley Borough Council in Surrey. Tensions foster violence Another millennium worry is the possibility of an increase in the level of domestic violence. Refuge groups and councillors report an increase in the number of incidents of domestic violence at Christmas. With the longer holidays than normal, they are expecting worse this year. "Alcohol and recreational drugs, families being thrown together for long lengths of time, and economic or social stresses can all be triggers." says Denise Knowles, a Relate councillor from Northamptonshire. She suggests co-operation, pre-planning and keeping the alcohol consumption down as solutions to the millennial flare-up. Deep breathing and counting to ten before exploding can also help. |
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