Author Topic: Woman’s Coca-Cola ‘habit’ cited in death  (Read 478 times)

Offline Marvelous

  • HEF FOI
  • Honorary Wakandan
  • *****
  • Posts: 2406
    • View Profile
    • PhotograFX
Woman’s Coca-Cola ‘habit’ cited in death
« on: April 20, 2012, 11:31:37 AM »
When people attribute someone's untimely death to a Coke overdose, they're usually not talking about the world's most popular soda.

But experts in New Zealand say Natasha Harris' 2-gallon-a-day Coca-Cola consumption "probably" contributed to her death. The soda company responded to the alleged connection by noting that even water consumption can be fatal in excessive amounts.

"The first thing she would do in the morning was to have a drink of Coke beside her bed and the last thing she would do at night was have a drink of Coke," Harris' partner Chris Hodgkinson said in a deposition. "She was addicted to Coke."

Hodgkinson testified that Harris drank between 2.1 gallons and 2.6 gallons of Coke every day.

The 30-year-old Harris died of a heart attack in February 2010. According to New Zealand's Fairfax Media, pathologist Dr. Dan Mornin testified on Thursday that Harris likely suffered from hypokalemia (low potassium levels), which he believes was caused by her overall poor nutrition, including the unusually high levels of Coke consumption.

Though in fairness to the soda manufacturer, it was also revealed that Harris made other questionable health choices before her death, including smoking a reported 30 cigarettes per day and having poor eating habits. Dr. Mornin also said Harris had "toxic levels of caffeine" in her blood, though it's not clear if those levels came exclusively from Coke or from a combination of other sources, including coffee.

Karen Thompson, a spokeswoman for Coca-Cola Oceania, defended the safety of her company's products in a statement:
"We concur with the information shared by the coroner's office that the grossly excessive ingestion of any food product, including water, over a short period of time with the inadequate consumption of essential nutrients, and the failure to seek appropriate medical intervention when needed, can be dramatically symptomatic."

Harris reportedly experienced high blood pressure in the months leading up to her death. Hodgkinson called emergency services and tried mouth-to-mouth resuscitation but was not able to revive Harris after she collapsed in her home.


"2. IF YOU DON'T READ THE BOOK BUT ARE WILLING TO ARGUE ABOUT IT EITHER YOU ARE:
a) An idiot who doesn't know what he's talking about.
b) A liar who is a fan who can't admit it to himself or others."

Offline Battle

  • Honorary Wakandan
  • *****
  • Posts: 4927
  • Love, Peace & Soul!
    • View Profile
    • Ol' School Media
Re: Woman’s Coca-Cola ‘habit’ cited in death
« Reply #1 on: April 20, 2012, 11:46:50 AM »
Told ya!

Offline Marvelous

  • HEF FOI
  • Honorary Wakandan
  • *****
  • Posts: 2406
    • View Profile
    • PhotograFX
Re: Woman’s Coca-Cola ‘habit’ cited in death
« Reply #2 on: April 20, 2012, 07:58:02 PM »
Told ya!

Told ya?  I missed it B-Man, what did ya say?


"2. IF YOU DON'T READ THE BOOK BUT ARE WILLING TO ARGUE ABOUT IT EITHER YOU ARE:
a) An idiot who doesn't know what he's talking about.
b) A liar who is a fan who can't admit it to himself or others."

Offline Battle

  • Honorary Wakandan
  • *****
  • Posts: 4927
  • Love, Peace & Soul!
    • View Profile
    • Ol' School Media
Re: Woman’s Coca-Cola ‘habit’ cited in death
« Reply #3 on: April 21, 2012, 04:39:52 AM »
Told ya?  I missed it B-Man, what did ya say?





In another thread, I mentioned that Coca-Cola is not good for you at all. 

In fact, it is directly linked to heart disease.

Offline Kristopher

  • Honorary Wakandan
  • *****
  • Posts: 1144
    • View Profile
Re: Woman’s Coca-Cola ‘habit’ cited in death
« Reply #4 on: May 07, 2012, 09:19:46 AM »
Told ya?  I missed it B-Man, what did ya say?





In another thread, I mentioned that Coca-Cola is not good for you at all. 

In fact, it is directly linked to heart disease.

Yes but let's be honest, if anyone drinks over 2 gallons(DAMN) of Coke soda a day, they're asking for health problems. I knew a young lady who drank a 6 pack of Pepsi a day and started to show signs of Kidney damage.

Offline Battle

  • Honorary Wakandan
  • *****
  • Posts: 4927
  • Love, Peace & Soul!
    • View Profile
    • Ol' School Media
Re: Woman’s Coca-Cola ‘habit’ cited in death
« Reply #5 on: March 19, 2013, 08:03:56 AM »
Mayor Bloomberg as Dr. Doom?


By Leonard Pitts Jr.
lpitts@MiamiHerald.com

Perhaps you remember when Dr. Doom conquered the world.

Or perhaps you don’t. Sadly enough, even in this day and age, not everyone is comic-book literate.


Suffice it to say, then, that back in the ’80s, Marvel Comics published a graphic novel in which the villainous Victor Von Doom achieved his dearest goal: to rule the world. And he made it a better place, too. Famine ended, the stock market climbed, crime fell, occupying armies withdrew, racial oppression vanished. Doom turned the planet into a paradise and the only cost of his beneficence was free will. He created a device that took away the ability of human beings to decide for themselves.

When the Avengers defeated him, the world returned to rack and ruin as humanity reasserted its right to be as bleeped up as it wanted to be.  The Avenger Hawkeye wondered aloud if they had done the right thing. Whereupon Captain America admonished him, “The world isn’t perfect. . . . But people are free to make their own choices — and that’s the way it should be.”

He could have been talking to Michael Bloomberg.

The emperor — beg pardon, the mayor — of New York City was defeated Monday, not by the Avengers, but by a state Supreme Court judge, Milton Tingling, who struck down Bloomberg’s ban on the sale of extra large, non-diet soft drinks. Justice Tingling, though not known to possess superpowers, nevertheless zapped the forces of overreach. “Arbitrary and capricious,” he called the restrictions, which would have taken effect Tuesday.

But Bloomberg’s ban was more than that. It was the very definition of liberalism run amok, a good idea (people should limit their intake of sugary soft drinks) driven headlong into the weeds of overkill, over regulation and basic preposterousness. The resemblance to conservative extremism and its resort to unwieldy laws to govern behaviors it disapproves (did someone say transvaginal ultrasound?), is doubtless unintended, but no less real even so.

Apparently, if you send two people venturing out, one to the extreme left, and the other to the extreme right, of our political spectrum, they will end up face to face. Because the distinguishing characteristic of extreme liberalism or extreme conservatism is the extremism; itself, the fact that some people just don’t know when to quit.

Obviously, the state is sometimes obliged to impose restrictions. One shouldn’t be allowed to sell Camels to kindergarteners. Or do 90 on a residential street. Or discriminate by race, creed, gender, condition, or sexual orientation.

But there is a difference between those restrictions the state imposes to protect the health, welfare and property of those around us from us or defend the vulnerable from exploitation and those the state imposes to regulate behavior that is simply unwise. The latter reflects a lack of faith in the wisdom of people, their ability, when properly informed, to make the right choice.

Yes, obesity is a crisis impacting our health, our economy and even, some have argued, our national security. We are a lard butt nation waddling toward demise. Got it.

Yet, if Americans kicked their cigarette addiction by a public campaign that educated them to the dangers thereof, what reason do we have to believe they would not be able to kick sugary soft drinks by the same means?

None.

So Bloomberg is wrong, and Captain America was right. If one is not free to make one’s own bad or stupid decisions, then one is not free. It is an abiding truth of which we seem to need constant reminders.

Perhaps you remember the axiom about eternal vigilance being the price of freedom. If so, you will not be surprised to hear that Dr. Doom, as he escaped, said he was only defeated “for now.”

Or that Mayor Bloomberg has vowed to appeal.