FRIDAY, Jan. 27 (HealthDay News) -- The "choking game" has been
played by nearly one in seven students who were surveyed at a Texas
university, a new study finds.
This so-called 'game' is played individually or in groups and involves
deliberately cutting off blood flow to the brain in order to achieve a
high. This is done by choking oneself or others, applying a ligature
around the neck, placing a plastic bag over the head, placing heavy
objects on the chest, or hyperventilating.
The dangerous behavior -- also called the "fainting game," "pass out"
or "space monkey" -- has led to several suffocation deaths in Texas and
around the country, according to researchers at the Crime Victims'
Institute at Sam Houston State University.
"This study was undertaken to determine who is playing the game, in
what context, and how they learned about it," Glen Kercher, director of
the Crime Victims' Institute, said in a university news release. "It is
our hope that these findings will inform efforts by parents, schools and
community agencies to warn young people about the dangers of participating
in the choking game."
The investigators conducted a survey of 837 university students and
found that 16 percent reported having played the choking game and 72
percent of those students said they had done so more than once. The
average age when students first played the choking game was 14, and 90
percent of those who had played the game first heard about it from
peers.
Curiosity was the primary motivation for playing the choking game and
most of those who had participated said others were present. Males were
more likely to have participated than females, the findings showed.
Learning about the potential dangers of the choking game acted as a
deterrent for most the students who had never engaged in this
behavior.
"This 'game,' as it is often called, does not require obtaining any
drugs or alcohol, is free, and can go undetected by many parents,
teachers, physicians and other authority figures. Most importantly, many
of those who engage in this activity do not understand that the practice
can be just as deadly as the illegal substances youth have been warned
against," the study authors pointed out in the news release.
More information
The U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention has more about the
choking game .
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