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Get ready for Safety Week September 12 – 18

Are you doing your best to prevent injury and illness? Each year, the Safety Department hosts Safety Week to raise awareness of this important issue. In addition, Employee Benefits provides tips and information on how to keep ourselves and each other safe and healthy at home, in the workplace and everywhere else.

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Costco employee introducing safety week

During Safety Week, you’ll learn how to: 

  • Prevent injuries, slips/trips/falls and near misses 
  • Prepare for emergencies  
  • Be a safety lookout 
  • Achieve food and fire safety  
  • Get support for your emotional, physical and financial well-being 

Tell us your safety slogan

Send your favorite safety slogan to safety@costco.com for a chance to have it displayed in the next Safety News You Can Use newsletter. Some of our favorites are:

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When we practice safety every day, we get to go home to our families safely every day.

John Martz, Department Manager
Jacksonville MDO #4208

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Tomorrow is the reward for working safely today.

Matt Freitas, GM
SW Henderson #1320 

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For safety’s sake, let’s communicate!

Maggie Buckley, Safety Coordinator
Waltham #308

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Does alcohol really help you relax?

Many of us assume that drinking helps us relax at the end of a long, hard day. But when more than half of Americans increased their alcohol consumption during COVID-19 lock-downs and 1 in 10 over the age of 12 have Alcohol Use Disorder,* it’s worth looking at whether drinking is doing what we think it does.

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Does drinking really “take the edge off”?

According to a recent study released by the RAND Corporation and supported by the National Institute on Alcohol Abuse and Alcoholism (NIAAA), drinking has soared during the pandemic. For example, heavy drinking for women has increased by 41%. “The magnitude of these increases is striking,” Michael Pollard, lead author of the study and a sociologist at RAND, told ABC television. “People’s depression increases, anxiety increases, [and] alcohol use is often a way to cope with these feelings. But depression and anxiety are also the outcomes of drinking; it’s this feedback loop … that it’s trying to address.”

If you are truly drinking moderately, which the National Institutes of Health defines as one 5-ounce glass of wine or 12-ounce beer for women and two for men, and alcohol doesn’t have a noticeable effect on your overall mood or sleep, you are probably staying clear of alcohol’s anxiety-elevating effects. But if you are worried about your alcohol use, it’s worth looking at how it is affecting you.

Alcohol and the brain

Alcohol affects the brain in two phases. First it increases dopamine levels (the body’s “feel good” chemical). This gives you feelings of well-being, even elation. Second, it calms certain neurotransmitters, which slows down brain functioning. This slowing down is how alcohol acts as a depressant. Once dopamine levels go back to normal, you’re still left with a depressed system, which often leads to another drink to get the dopamine levels back up.

As occasional drinking becomes a daily habit, alcohol has less effect on the receptors that make us feel good. But by then, our brain has learned to crave alcohol when we’re stressed. This shift can increase anxiety, often for the entire day after drinking. And it can lead to wanting a drink the next evening to wind down, causing the entire cycle to start over again. Very often cutting out alcohol can lead to a significant decrease in your overall anxiety.

Alcohol and your sleep

While the sedative effect of alcohol initially might help us fall asleep, as little as one drink too close to bedtime can wreak havoc on both the quality and quantity of your sleep. Alcohol interferes with our sleep stages, especially REM (rapid-eye movement) sleep, the restorative part of our sleep cycle. When alcohol finally leaves your bloodstream, you’re often jolted awake as your nervous system, coming off several hours in a depressed state, tries to regain its balance by lurching into active mode.

Sleep is the ultimate self-care activity. It is the first line of defense against anxiety and depression. Midnight fretting, 3 a.m. wakeups, night sweats, morning headaches and brain fog are all signs that alcohol is impacting your sleep and bringing along the anxiety you are trying to avoid.

Do you have a problem?

We sometimes have an overly simplistic way of thinking about alcohol use — either you’re an alcoholic and your drinking is truly out of control, or there’s no problem at all. But that isn’t accurate. Most people who drink too much are not addicted and wouldn’t experience what we think of as withdrawal if they stopped. They don’t need treatment or intervention. In fact, it’s likely no one around them is worried about their drinking at all. But from a mental health perspective, alcohol is still affecting them negatively.

Alcohol is highly addictive. It causes sleep problems, depression, headaches, stomach issues, infertility and birth defects. Further, it dramatically increases your susceptibility to many types of cancer, is associated with reckless behavior and blackouts, and is responsible for more than 95,000 deaths in America — and 3,000,000 worldwide — each year. Alcohol as an aid to relaxation is a terrible idea. If your drinking is medicinal, it’s time to look for safer, more effective ways to cope.

Ready to rethink your alcohol use?

Here are some steps you can take:

icon - a full measuring cup

Get real about your drinking.

The next time you relax with alcohol, remember that a 12-ounce can of beer, a shot of spirits and a little over a half cup of wine counts as one drink. Keep track of how many drinks you have each day, and rate your overall anxiety, depression and sleep quality.

icon - a person's relaxed face

Find other ways to relax.

The ritual of ending the day by sitting down with a drink is hard to give up unless we have an enticing alternative. Try swapping in a non-alcoholic drink that you reserve for happy hour; it can often stand in effectively for alcohol. Reading a book, taking a bath, connecting with a loved one or even just going to bed early are all proven anxiety relievers.

icon - a calendar

Take a break.

There are countless free or low-cost programs online to offer support and guidance to anyone wanting to take an alcohol time-out. Not drinking at all, for at least a month, is the best way to see how alcohol is affecting your life, and to decide whether it’s worth it.

None of the above suggestions replace treatment or a 12-step program. If you experience strong resistance to any of the above steps, it’s worth getting curious about the role of alcohol in your life. While certain people never drink more than the suggested amount, most people who drink consistently will eventually need to re-evaluate the way they are drinking. There shouldn’t be shame or a stigma about wanting to slow down or stop drinking because needing to do so isn’t the exception; it’s the rule.

*National Center for Drug Abuse Statistics. Alcohol Abuse Statistics.

Source: Psychology Today. Does alcohol really help you relax?

For more information on alcohol misuse and support services that can help you or someone in your household find healthier ways to reduce stress, see the resources below.

 

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Explore treatment options for alcohol concerns

People often think there are only two places to get help for alcohol concerns — Alcoholics Anonymous (AA) or residential rehab. But today, there are more choices than you might expect. Health care professionals now provide up-to-date treatments backed by science. Care is offered at different levels of intensity in a variety of settings.

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A two-part treatment approach

Typically, the first step is to see a primary care provider (PCP). After completing an alcohol use disorder assessment, they’ll discuss treatment options and make recommendations, which can include: 

  • Talk therapy. A licensed therapist can help people build coping strategies and skills to stop or reduce drinking. Treatment can include one-on-one, family or group sessions.
  • Medications. A primary care provider or a board-certified addiction doctor can prescribe non-addicting medications. These can help people stop drinking and avoid relapse.  

These two options can be used in combination and tailored to individual needs.

Four basic levels of care

There are four basic levels of care or intensity for alcohol treatment. These levels, as defined by the American Society of Addiction Medicine, include:

  1. Outpatient. Regular office visits for counseling, medication support or both. Some lower-intensity outpatient-care options, if appropriate, could include:
    • A high-quality, traditional outpatient program.
    • A care team you put together, including therapists and doctors with addiction specialties to team with your primary care provider. It’s a way to get higher quality, one-on-one care that maintains privacy.
    • Telehealth — phone or video sessions. These are phone or video sessions for talk therapy or medical care. They can be particularly useful in locations with few addiction health professionals.
    • eHealth options — online or mobile. The National Institute on Alcohol Abuse and Alcoholism (NIAAA) has developed a number of tools that help people overcome alcohol concerns. They include a computer-based cognitive-behavioral therapy program; digital self-help program; and a mobile tool to prevent relapse.
  2. Intensive outpatient or partial hospitalization. Coordinated outpatient care for complex needs.
  3. Residential. Low- or high-intensity programs in 24-hour treatment settings.
  4. Intensive inpatient. Medically directed 24-hour services; may manage withdrawal.

How do you know which level is right for someone? A complete assessment of a person’s alcohol problems and complications can help guide their care team’s recommendations.

Support groups for empathy and accountability.

In addition to professionally led treatment, many people benefit from mutual support groups. Groups can vary widely, so it’s important to try different ones to find a good fit. There are several good options, including:

  • Alcoholics Anonymous (AA) — the most common mutual help group, with meetings in most communities and online. Meetings involve participants sharing their personal histories with drinking and recovery and encourage progress along “12 steps” that have a strong spiritual component.
  • LifeRing — a secular (nonreligious) peer support network supporting abstinence from alcohol and other drugs.
  • Secular Organizations for Sobriety — an alternative to spiritual support groups, this is a network of local and online groups dedicated to helping people achieve and maintain sobriety.
  • SMART Recovery — a research-based support program that focuses on empowering members to build four sets of skills: motivation to abstain, coping with urges, problem solving and lifestyle balance.
  • Women for Sobriety — a self-help program designed by and for women, focusing on emotional and spiritual growth.

For more information on treatment options for alcohol misuse, check out this RFL video.

Regardless of where or how you seek treatment, look for approaches that are “evidence based.” This means the treatments are backed by large, well-designed studies.

Source: NIH NIAA. What types of alcohol treatment are available?

For more information on alcohol treatment services covered by your Costco medical plan, see the resources below and make an appointment with your primary care provider.

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What does alcohol do to your body?

Is that nightly glass of chardonnay a problem? How about the occasional day of heavy drinking with your best buddies? Is it safe to drink more than three cocktails if your designated driver gets you home? The answers may surprise you. The fact is, drinking too much — whether on a single occasion or over time — can take a serious toll on your health. 

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Here’s how alcohol can affect your body:

Brain

Alcohol interferes with the brain’s communication pathways and can affect the way the brain looks and works. These disruptions can change mood and behavior and make it harder to think clearly and move with coordination. 

Heart

Drinking a lot over a long time or too much on a single occasion can damage the heart, causing problems such as:

  • Cardiomyopathy — stretching and drooping of heart muscle
  • Arrhythmias — irregular heartbeat
  • Stroke
  • High blood pressure  

Liver

Heavy drinking takes a toll on the liver and can lead to a variety of problems and liver inflammations, including:

  • Steatosis, or fatty liver
  • Alcoholic hepatitis
  • Fibrosis
  • Cirrhosis

Pancreas

Alcohol causes the pancreas to produce toxic substances that can eventually lead to pancreatitis. This is a dangerous inflammation and swelling of the blood vessels in the pancreas that prevents proper digestion. 

Cancer

Drinking alcohol has been linked with several types of cancer. That’s why the American Cancer Society’s (ACS) Guideline for Diet and Physical Activity for Cancer Prevention states that it may be best not to drink alcohol. A study by ACS researchers supports this recommendation.

The study, published in Cancer Epidemiology, found that alcohol accounts for a “considerable proportion” of cancer diagnoses and deaths in all US states. From 2013 to 2016, drinking alcohol was tied to more than 75,000 new diagnoses of cancer and almost 19,000 deaths from cancer each year.1

Clear patterns have emerged between alcohol consumption and increased risks of certain types of cancer:

  • Head and neck cancer, including oral cavity, pharynx and larynx cancers.
  • Esophageal cancer, particularly esophageal squamous cell carcinoma. In addition, people who inherit a deficiency in an enzyme that metabolizes alcohol have been found to have substantially increased risks of esophageal squamous cell carcinoma if they consume alcohol.
  • Liver cancer.
  • Breast cancer: Studies have consistently found an increased risk of breast cancer in women with increased alcohol intake. Women who consume about one drink per day have a 5% to 9% higher chance of developing breast cancer than women who do not drink at all.
  • Colorectal cancer.

Immune system:

Drinking too much can also weaken your immune system, making your body a much easier target for disease. Chronic drinkers are more liable to contract diseases like pneumonia and tuberculosis than people who do not drink too much. Drinking a lot on a single occasion slows your body’s ability to ward off infections — even up to 24 hours after getting drunk.

1Cancer Epidiomiology. Proportion of cancer cases and deaths attributable to alcohol consumption in the U.S. state, 2013–2016.

In the end, it’s important to be informed, and to weigh the risks of drinking alcohol against the benefits.

Source: NIH NIAA. Alcohol’s effects on the body.

For more information on alcohol misuse and support services that can help you or someone in your household develop a healthier relationship with alcohol, see the resources below.

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Healthy recipe

HEALTHY RECIPE

Mojito mocktail

This refreshingly minty mojito mocktail has all the flavor and none of the alcohol! Just muddle (crush) fresh mint, lime and sugar (or agave) and top with ice and club soda. It’s so tasty, you won’t even miss the rum.

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Ingredients: 5
Prep: 5 min
Makes 1 serving
Calories: 110
photo of a mojito mocktail
Ingredients:

10 fresh mint leaves, plus more for garnish

1/2 lime cut into 4 wedges, divided

2 tablespoons granulated sugar or to taste

1 cup ice cubes

1/2 cup club soda

Directions:
Step 1

In a medium sturdy glass, add mint leaves and 1 lime wedge. Use a muddler (if you don’t have a muddler, use the end of a wooden spoon) to crush the mint and lime, releasing the mint oils and lime juice.

Step 2

Add 2 more lime wedges and the sugar (or other sweetener), and muddle again to release the lime juice. Do not strain the mixture.

Step 3

Fill the glass almost to the top with ice. Add club soda and more sugar to taste. Garnish with mint leaves and remaining lime wedge. 

Nutrition

Calories: 110 | Carbohydrates: 29g | Protein: 1g | Fat: 1g | Saturated Fat: 1g | Sodium: 41mg | Potassium: 57mg | Fiber: 2g | Sugar: 25g | Vitamin A: 425IU, Vitamin C: 13mg | Calcium: 35mg | Iron: 1mg

Source: Culinary Hill

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How addiction affects the brain

It seems as if drug misuse is in the news every day. Whether you’re a parent, a caregiver or someone who’s simply concerned about a loved one and their safety, it’s important to start communicating early and often about substance misuse.

The following 4-minute video takes a scientific view of the subject. It looks at the impact drugs have on the brain, including changes in brain chemistry that strengthen the grip of addiction. Take a moment to watch it with the kids in your life and discover together why avoiding drugs in the first place is the smart, healthy choice.

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Show transcript

Sources: Prevention Action Alliance. Addiction & the brain — For kids! Addiction Policy Forum

For more information on substance misuse prevention and treatment, check out the helpful resources below.