An American woman has paid the ultimate price for the Wii
A mother has died of water intoxication whilst taking part in a radio competition to win her children a Nintendo Wii. 28 year old, Jennifer Strange, took part in a competition called “Hold your wee for a Wii”, where contestants were tasked with consuming large amounts of water without urinating.
Strange, who was found dead on Friday afternoon in her home had left the radio station in Sacremento in tears after she’d failed to win the competition. She complained of a terrible headache to her employers. A co-competitor, James Ybarra, described the event to News 10:
"They were small little half-pint bottle so we thought it was going to be easy. They told us if you don't feel like you can do this; don't put your health in risk. I tapped (out) after five (bottles). My bladder couldn't handle it anymore.”
This isn’t the first incident of life threatening danger surrounding next generation consoles. A couple of months ago
we reported a drive by shooting that took place in a queue for a PS3. That time there were no casualties, unfortunately, that wasn’t the case this time.
We expect the radio station will now face a court case with a question mark over whether running stunts like this are either legal or responsible. John Geary, vice president and marketing manager for Entercom Sacramento, owner of the station, expressed shock at the incident and said they were awaiting information to help explain why and how this occurred. It is not currently known how much water Strange drank.
Shocked by this story or do you feel it's representative of modern society? Let us know in the
forums.
surely its the womans fault for drinking bad water...
It's all about the electrolytes.
I guess kids can now complain when their parents say "Just hold it in, it's not gonna kill you" :(
- Drinking lots of water: relatively harmless
- Holding it in: relatively harmless
But mixing the two together is deadly, unfortunately.
I wouldn't say anyone should be liable, this is just one of those unfortunate things that happen.
Aggies
edit: wow did not see aggies11 post.... please explain "It's all about the electrolytes.".
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Water_poisoning
Absolutely idiotic stunt by the station, really they should be held accountable I think.
even if the radio station had meidcal personel on staff wouldnt have mattered because she left and died later at home, the medical staff that would have been there wouldnt have been able to do anything for her
and having put gatorade with that might have done her in even quicker with the fact that they were holding in the wee, too much potassium in the system
however, the radio station whether or not the radio station should be liable i couldnt say
What a dumba*s, not the stations fault.
in all seriousness i cant believe the radio station didnt do some in depth research on the dangers of this kind of stunt.
i'd say everyone involved is stupid, the station for running the competition and the people for being so greedy they'd risk their health for a games console
When you drink water, you increase the amount of water in the body, but unless you also consume electrolytes, the amount of electrolytes stays the same (or even lowers, if you sweat, etc). This means that the relative concentration goes down, which is the important number. The bodies natural reaction to restore this, is to get rid of the excess water (urinate). If you hold it in while drinking large quantities of water, you can seriously lower your electrolyte concentrations.
Low levels of electrolyte concentration apparently messes with the brain, causing the symptoms that the lady experience (headache, nausea, light headed-ness etc), ultimately leading in death.
If this is indeed what happened (based on the news info, it sounds likely), then she would have needed to maintain her electrolyte levels, by either getting rid of water (urinating), or taking in more electrolytes (eg. gatoraide).
The situation is made worse/sped up if your diet is naturally low in electrolytes (eg. a low sodium diet).
This is just a rough outline of the process. But basically the body runs on water, meaning that the level of water in your body is actually significant. Drink as much water as you want, but allow the body to naturally make the adjustments it needs (eg. urinate). Interfere with that process (holding it in), and the results can be unfortunate :/-
To be fair: any reasonable/average person probably would not have seen anything wrong with the setup, and would have been surprised by the results.
Aggies
If I was in that situation though, I would have sat on a radiator and had several hair dryers blowing in my face. So, I'd constantly be sweating out the water I would have just drank, therefore I would be able to last a long time. But aside from that, is £180 really worth a life? No.
i assume she was at the radio station, she did the competition, and then left
Now is it just me who would go and urinate once i completed the competition ? which would probably allow her body to get back to normality .... (well kinda)
the way its being told so far, makes it sound like shes lost, gone home, died and never urinated ?
randosome, your kidneys can only process water a certain volume of water over a given period of time. This Strange woman probably had a wee (and hence lost the contest), went home, went again and then died as a result of the still very low concentrations of salt in her blood. Going for a wee doesn't replenish those lost salts. They are lost after the water has passed through the kidneys.
I wish people would inform themselves about water poisoning before blaming this on the contestant. Personally, I blame Nintendo. They shouldn't have given their console such a bloody silly name. :p
A) She failed to win, um, I assume in failing to win she either wet herself or what?
B) She complained to her employers of headaches? So, she went to work after the competition? So she didn't pee in all this time?
I can sit in a Cinema for a 3hour film, and not pee, but the second I move I have to go then and there, because it really is too painful to hold on.
I can only assume that this was caused by (as mentioned above) a chemical imbalance, rather than not peeing or drinking so much as too effectivly drown.
The radio station could be found responsible, if they didn't make clear the effects of taking part, but I failed to see any Time data, ie the compo was Monday, she died Friday...
I blame the radio station for that one, it's a bloody stupid thing to do, and they should've looked this up beforehand.
The station should have know this, there are a number of cases of people dieing from drinking to much water. Their health warning, dosent mean anything if they said stop i you feel sick, these effects would have manafested affter the contest. THey shold have given them a couple o bannanas and some gateraid during the stunt, then everyting would have bee ok.
Of course, she could have done her research, but why would you without even the idea of risk and a large media organisation actually suggesting it?
The media hold a position of power and trust; with that comes responsibility. Whether this should be the case is for another discussion entirely.
Agreed.
I don't believe you can claim the woman was greedy. She assumed the contest was safe (and I believe many other people would have thought the same). If I had a chance to compete in a safe and free contest I would enter the contest, and I imagine many other people would too.
L J
This is very sad that people were unaware that drinking too much water is bad for you (doesn't anyone remember that episode of House where that boy had this same problem?) and I think the blame rests on both the station and the woman. She shouldn't have waited so long/not gone to the hospital/done the stunt in the first place, and the radio station should know better than host a contest involving something with an obvious potential danger.
Disagreed! :p
On the part of the station, however, I would've thought purely in the interests of their own insurance liability this would have been looked into.
Any challenge that has ANY kind of "endurance" aspect is going to be pushing some area of the body towards a limit.
Right, I'm off to the bathroom, I can count 4 recently-emptied beer bottles lined up on my desk and suddenly I don't wanna hold it in any longer ;)
This is the only thing that that matters. Why are we wasting time discussing blame? Making snide remarks about darwin ********. A life is gone, forever. A child has just had the most important person in their whole life taken from them. Many more lives have been altered for the worse, forever. Some things, you never get over. Yet we sit here blathering on about this. Reading this thread, my own post included, makes me a little sad for the world we live in.
Before doing ANY type of contest that requires the contestant to push their bodies to extreme limits, they should have consulted some kind of medical professional to make sure it was safe first.
To be honest, I never knew water in extreme amounts could be dangerous, and I doubt many of the people here on this site knew it could kill you. This is a really sad story and I feel especially bad for those kids. Imagine the guilt they must be going through. Imagine the memories they will have every time they see a Nintendo Wii.
Some people are bound to insist that's in poor taste, but ROFL :D
L J