News: Expats in Dubai embrace luxury IV drips to preempt hangovers
Private clinics across Dubai have introduced premium intravenous (IV) drip treatments marketed as both preventive and curative remedies for alcohol-induced hangovers. The customizable “cocktails” typically combine saline solution with B-complex vitamins, electrolytes (sodium, potassium, magnesium), antioxidants such as vitamin C, and mild analgesics to address dehydration, headache, nausea, and fatigue. Delivered in upscale clinic settings or via mobile home-visit services, sessions last between 30 and 60 minutes and cost approximately AED 700–1,100. This service has become particularly popular among the expatriate community seeking rapid recovery to maintain busy work and social schedules. Critics and some medical professionals caution that, despite anecdotal reports of near‐immediate relief, there is limited peer-reviewed evidence supporting the overall efficacy of IV therapy for hangover prevention or treatment and highlight potential risks including allergic reactions and electrolyte imbalances.
Dubai’s wealthy expats turn to IV drips for instant hangover relief
Private clinics in Dubai now offer “anti-hangover” intravenous drip treatments – vitamin, mineral, electrolyte, and mild analgesic cocktails – administered before or after drinking to rapidly rehydrate and alleviate headaches, nausea, and fatigue. Priced between £100 and £300 per injection, these services cater to affluent expatriates eager to maintain demanding social and professional schedules. Providers claim that a single 30- to 60-minute infusion can eliminate hangover symptoms by delivering nutrients directly into the bloodstream. However, medical experts note that these drips lack formal regulatory approval and robust clinical evidence of efficacy. Symbolically, their popularity underscores Dubai’s broader liberalizing reforms—such as relaxed alcohol taxes and new personal-status laws – aimed at attracting foreign investors and residents.
Study: Interventions for preventing or treating alcohol hangover: systematic review of randomised controlled trials
No compelling medical intervention exists to prevent or treat alcohol hangover.
Eight double-blind, randomized controlled trials tested interventions including propranolol, tropisetron, tolfenamic acid, fructose/glucose, borage oil (gamma-linolenic acid), artichoke extract, prickly pear extract, and a yeast-based preparation. Only tolfenamic acid, gamma-linolenic acid from Borago officinalis, and the yeast-based preparation showed modest improvements in some symptom scores. Overall, however, no conventional or complementary treatment demonstrated consistent efficacy, and the most reliable way to avoid hangover symptoms is abstinence or moderation.
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