Medicines containing paracetamol (acetaminophen) are the commonest cause of intentional drug overdose in Britain1 2 3 4 and are increasingly implicated elsewhere in Europe3 and the United States. Around 70 000 cases of paracetamol overdose occur annually in Britain, and numbers are growing.4 Fortunately, death from overdose is rare—about 200 cases a year in Britain—against a remarkable safety record of 30 million packs containing paracetamol sold each year.1 2 3 4 Hospital resources have been concentrated on trying to anticipate the few patients most likely to develop serious liver injury after overdose5 6 since many deaths are preventable by early intervention, including treatment with the antidote N-acetylcysteine.5 6 A bigger problem, however, is how to predict who is going to take an overdose and how to stop them.
Last month, Britain's Medicines Control Agency launched a programme of consultation on the availability of solid dose analgesics, including paracetamol.7 The aim is to reinforce …
[1]
R. Garnier,et al.
Liver failure induced by paracetamol.
,
1993,
BMJ.
[2]
S. Loft,et al.
Consumption, overdose and death from analgesics during a period of over‐the‐counter availability of paracetamol in Denmark
,
1990,
Journal of internal medicine.
[3]
K. Hawton,et al.
Trends in deliberate self poisoning and self injury in Oxford, 1976-90.
,
1992,
BMJ.
[4]
K. Hawton,et al.
Paracetamol Self-Poisoning Characteristics, Prevention and Harm Reduction
,
1996,
British Journal of Psychiatry.
[5]
K. Hawton,et al.
Why patients choose paracetamol for self poisoning and their knowledge of its dangers
,
1995,
British medical journal.
[6]
I. Crombie,et al.
Hospitalisation for Deliberate Self-Poisoning in Scotland from 1981 to 1993: Trends in Rates and Types of Drugs Used
,
1996,
British Journal of Psychiatry.
[7]
M. Highley,et al.
Drugs prescribed for self poisoners.
,
1985,
British medical journal.