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Alcohol the Real Date-Rape Drug, Study Says
October 29, 2009

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Research Summary

Women who have lost control or consciousness due to excessive drinking have fueled what British researchers have termed the "urban legend" of drinks being spiked with so-called "date-rape" drugs, according to a new study.

The Telegraph reported Oct. 27 that Kent University researchers who studied 200 students found that many blamed their incapacitation on alleged spiking of drinks with drugs like Rohypnol or GHB when, in fact, they had drank to excess. Researchers concluded that many drinkers were in denial about their level of alcohol use and its debilitating effects.

Three-quarters of those surveyed cited drink spiking as a major risk in sexual assault -- far more than saw the risk in being drunk, taking drugs, or walking alone at night. But police say there's no evidence that rape victims are commonly drugged before attacks.

"Young women appear to be displacing their anxieties about the consequences of consuming what is in the bottle on to rumors of what could be put there by someone else," said researcher Adam Burgess. "The reason why fear of drink-spiking has become widespread seems to be a mix of it being more convenient to guard against than the effects of alcohol itself and the fact that such stories are exotic -- like a more adult version of 'stranger danger.'"

"We would be very interested in finding out whether the urban myth of spiking is also the result of parents feeling unable to discuss with their adult daughters how to manage drinking and sex and representing their anxieties about this through discussion of drink spiking risks," added researcher Sarah Moore.

The study was published in the November 2009 issue of the British Journal of Criminology.

This summary has been revised to reflect the following the correction:

Correction, Oct. 30, 2009: The original version of this summary erroneously stated, "But police say there's no evidence that rape suspects are commonly drugged before attacks." This should have referred to rape victims. The error, which we regret, has been corrected; thanks to our readers for alerting us to the mistake.

This article summarizes an external report or press release on research published in a scientific journal. When available, links to the sources are provided above.

COMMENTS ON THIS ARTICLE:

Posted by Debra Dibartolo on 30 Oct 09 10:13 AM EDT
I have been a Sexual Assault Nurse Examiner (SANE-A, SANE-P certified through IAFN) for 10 years. I agree completely with the finding in this study. It is however, very difficult to prove if drugs were involved in the rape. Because the urine/blood screens, in many instances, are not sensitive enough to pick up a one time/single dose of a drug in a patients urine/blood. Many drugs when used in combination with alcohol to potentiate its effects are not even screened for in some screening panels---Benadryl for example. A patient generally report several hours after the incident especially if drugs or alcohol, in excess or by malace, is involved because they are unresponsive and unaware of what happened. The first urine may be missed and the sudsequent urine may not contain enough metabolite to show positive on screening. During a sexual assualt exam is the the right time to be doing drug or alcohol interventions with the patient. Many clients feel guilty and shamed regarding the event. Our focus is on the clients health and safety, physical, emotional and medical well being and reempowering them to reagain a sence of control in their life. With that said it is important to also remember that even if a client is extremely intoxicated, under there own doing, sexual assault is a crime. And a client who is intoxicated certianly does not have the mental capacity to consent to sexual contact.

Posted by Vetanalyst on 30 Oct 09 10:50 AM EDT
This reinforces the need to increase public understanding of basic concepts of intoxication, its effects, and risks posed to health and safety. These concepts have been applied to impaired driving and underage drinking, but many other life situations are ignored or trivialized as harmless fun and desirable "socializing."

Posted by jim on 30 Oct 09 02:06 PM EDT
If the ER is using instant screens they may miss drugs on the DFSA panel (drug facilitated sexual assault) but any reasonably adept toxicology lab would stand a much better chance of finding residual analyte/metabolite using an immunoassay instrumented screen or GC/MS/MS or LC/MS/MS. Despite the fact that alcohol does indeed play a part in some number of cases, one has to ask how many drugged samples remain unidentified due to inept handling/analytical review or unwillingness of the law enforcement system to spend $$ on better methodology.

Posted by Diane Kopperman on 30 Oct 09 04:05 PM EDT
The problem with testing for substances like GBH is that the victim doesn't realize she has been raped until after her memory begins to return. By then she has washed any any physical evidence and the drug has passed through her system. Plus many agencies do not test specifically for date rape drugs. If the patient is obviously drunk, the hospital won't test for other substances anyway because they believe they already have the culprit and the staff tend to believe that the victim was getting drunk with the intention of compromising her inhibitions. Sexual assault is one of the few crimes where people believe the victim asked for it, wanted it to happen, or was negligent, when instead they should be focusing on the attitudes and behaviors of the perpetrator.

Posted by Barry Schecter on 30 Oct 09 09:27 PM EDT
How correct this is. I teach at a College and thisis the most common form of date rape. We focus on roofies or GHB, but how many people actually have access? Drinking, the girls do on their own. Being naive to alcohol, and wanting to fit in, the girls get drunk on their own, and become vulnerable, again, on their own. We need to educate our children, that just because someone is drunk, does not mean they want to be abused.

Posted by Spartacus on 31 Oct 09 12:29 PM EDT
There is no excuse for rape. That said, our brains are our first line of defense. Even one drink alters our consiousness. The alcohol industry wants to sell alcohol. A good recommendation from Reviving Ophelia is no more than one drink per hour, two drinks per day, four drinks per week.

Posted by Wingco44 on 02 Nov 09 04:09 PM EST
I tend to agree with the Telegraph article view. In my many years' experience, I have known numerous women who have had univited sex whilst under the influence of alcohol. One woman whom I worked with and who held a senior personnel position once told me that she regularly drank to excess on Fridays and Saturdays and woke up with numerous different and largely very unattractive men - she was both an attractive person and very pretty - she would not have chosen to sleep with them normally. In my teens, a lovely innocent young girl of 17 went freely with 2 men she met in a bar and was repeatedly 'raped' in their flat over a period of many hours; the Police refused to take the case further and I will always remember her mother saying that they must have 'laced' her drinks as she was such a good girl and would not willingly have put herself in this position. It is now too easy to blame a date rape drug and I'm sure it is greatly over-estimated the number of date rape drug cases. And where do the guys get these drugs? They are not readily available although some of the street drugs do have similar effects. Alcohol on the other hand is readily available to all. It will be interesting to see more precise testing for 'date rape' drugs but being involved in drug testing myself, I fully appreciate the not inconsiderable problems with drug testing. The crime is 'univited' or non-consenting sex (rape) regardless of how it was achieved.

Posted by PSpecialist on 12 Nov 09 09:32 AM EST
This reminds me of the term "blackout" where the girl (or guy) cannont remember what he/she did. Who knows that they weren't thinking about it before and actually consented. I'm saying this from my own experience as a rape victim and a victim of blackouts.

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