Adults at the party were also intoxicated, including his mother and father who were driven home about 11pm, the court heard.
The teen and other younger family members “started going for it”, and the boy was seen drunk and staggering before dropping to the grass in the backyard between midnight and 1am, where he vomited again.
He refused to drink water as he was moved to an outdoor couch, was rolled onto his side in case he vomited and fell asleep.
About 6.30am on Boxing Day, two relatives saw the boy sleeping on his side and snoring.
But two hours later, his uncle found him looking grey with foam and vomit coming from his mouth, as he asked his wife to call an ambulance.
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The teen’s uncle performed CPR until paramedics arrived and took him to hospital. On December 28, a CT scan showed the boy was brain dead.
On Wednesday, Coroner Catherine Fitzgerald said the 16-year-old’s death from acute alcohol intoxication served as a tragic reminder about the dangers of alcohol consumption for minors.
She said it could have been prevented if an ambulance was called when he became unconscious.
“He would have received medical intervention in the form of airway and oxygen support, which would have prevented his deterioration and subsequent death,” she said in her findings.
Fitzgerald noted the amount of alcohol consumed was “a significant amount for an adult, let alone a minor” and was critical of the adults’ permissive attitude, as none had intervened.
“The assessment made by adults present was that he would be fine when left drunk and unsupervised on a couch to ‘sleep it off’, and the assessment made the next morning was that he was simply ‘hungover’,” she said.
Victorian Alcohol and Drug Association chief executive Chris Christoforou said the harms associated with alcohol were often forgotten or downplayed, particularly over holiday periods like Christmas.
“This coroner’s findings offer a stark reminder that regulating alcohol in the home, observing the legal drinking age and practising responsible alcohol consumption is very important,” he said.
He said alcohol-related fatalities were rare in under 18s, but there had been a 60 per cent rise in fatal alcohol overdoses in the past decade.
Christoforou said adult supervision of young people drinking alcohol was essential, and encouraged parents to speak openly to their children about the harms of alcohol use.
AAP
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