Thames Reach
Thursday 23 February 2012
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Hand gel menace

 07 January 2012

Alcohol based hand gel
Alcohol based sterilising hand gel has been stolen from hospitals and then drunk by homeless people with chronic alcohol problems

Thames Reach is warning of the dangers of alcohol hand gels which are being stolen from hospitals and then drunk by homeless people with chronic alcohol problems.


The gels – which are found in hospital wards and used by visitors to clean their hands – are being taken for their high strength alcohol content despite being poisonous and extremely dangerous.


The problem seems particularly prevalent among Central and Eastern European rough sleepers – Thames Reach’s London Reconnection Team which helps Central and Eastern European rough sleepers in London return home, recorded over 20 cases last year and has seen seven cases since the start of 2012.


Recent newspaper reports have also linked the death of a Polish homeless man, who drowned in a canal in Paddington, to the consumption of alcohol hand gel stolen from a hospital.


The problem was first identified a couple in 2008 when it emerged that there had been five deaths in London among Central and Eastern European rough sleepers who were poisoned by drinking these gels.


Tom Vincent, who manages Thames Reach’s outreach services, said: “These alcohol hand gels are being abused by people who either don’t know or are too desperate to care about the risks – we need to get the message out that drinking these products can kill.”


Calls are now being made for hospitals to improve their security measures and to alert staff to the problem.


Tom Vincent said: “Some hospitals may be aware of the problem but by no means all. Some will need to improve their security, putting the dispensers in a safer place and ensuring they are securely locked up, and there is a need to raise awareness of the issue among hospital staff.”