Transcript Drug Abuse

Drug Abuse
Hotel California
 Many people believe that “Hotel California” by the
Eagles is a song about drugs/alcohol addiction.
 There are several key phrases in the song which
allude to addiction.
 Listen to the song, and lets discuss the statements on
your handout.
Drug Abuse – behaviour or something more?
 It is thought that people who abuse drugs lack moral
principles or will power.
 Thus, if you can change their behaviour they will
stop using drugs…. right???
 Wrong… problem is this is an oversimplification of
those who abuse drugs.
 It is now known that drug addiction is a complex
problem, one that cannot be oversimplified.
The Brain
 So why is drug abuse such a complicated issue?
 We know that drugs affect the brain, the brain is one of
the most complicated organs in our body.
 Great biologist don’t even know the full potential of the
brain, and as such they don’t know how chemicals can
affect it.
 Not only that, but different people sometimes react
differently when chemicals are introduced to the body.
(note all the possible side effects when you take
medicine, and how some people are affected differently)
 Thus, it is almost impossible to predict exactly what will
happen when person A or person B uses drugs.
Is there hope?
 Yes, one of the greatest leaps in science over the past
100 years – some would suggest – is the
advancement of understanding the brain.
 While there is still a TON to learn about the brain,
we have been making significant gains and this has
helped us understand what happens when chemicals
interact with the brain.
 There is hope that we can successfully treat people
who are abusing drugs and guide them to have
productive lives.
Addiction
 Drugs contain chemicals that tap into the brain’s
communication system and disrupt the way nerve cells
normally send, receive, and process information; there are
two way that drugs disrupt this process:
 1) The drug imitates the brain’s natural chemical
messengers and;
 2) The drug over stimulates the “reward circuit” of the
brain.
 As such we get one final result - they become ADDICTED
 Once addicted, the brain starts to rely on the drugs as a way
to send information through the brain instead of the
natural chemicals in our brain.
Addiction
 Because the body is using less and less of the
chemicals in the brain – like dopamine or
serotonin – the body starts to produce less and less
of it.
 Now the brain isn’t working properly, and the
neurons are not transmitting information properly,
and the body starts to crave the stimulant or the
depressant of the drug and the person is now
addicted.
Addiction
 For most people, the initial decision to take drugs is
voluntary.
 While taking drugs does change the brain over time,
everyone who abuses drugs has two common
characteristics:
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A loss of self control
An inability to resist the intense impulse to take drugs
Treatment
 Treatment is usually specially designed for each patient –
i.e. not one treatment pattern is universal for everyone.
 Specialists observe a patient’s drug abuse patterns cooccurring medical, psychiatric, and social problems and
prescribe a course of action for the patient.
 The prescription is a combination of medicine and
behavioral therapy.
 If one is committed to the plan of action that is
prescribed to them it can lead to a sustained recovery
and a life without drug abuse.
Relapse
 Similar to other chronic, relapsing diseases, such as
diabetes, asthma, or heart disease, drug addiction
can relapse as well.
 Relapse, however, does not signal treatment failure.
 Rather, it indicates
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That treatment should be reinstated
Adjusted or
An alternative treatment is needed to help the individual
regain control and recover.
Why do people become addicted
 Risk for addiction is influenced by a combination of
factors:
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Individual biology,
Social environment, and;
Age or stage of development
Biology
 Biology. The genes that people are born with—in
combination with environmental influences—
account for about half of their addiction
vulnerability.
 Other factors that are biological that may influence
the risk for drug abuse and addiction are:
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gender,
ethnicity, and
the presence of other mental disorders
Environment
 Environment. A person’s environment includes many
different influences, from:
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family and friends
socioeconomic status and
quality of life in general.
 Factors that greatly influence the occurrence of drug
abuse and the escalation to addiction in a person’s life
are:
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peer pressure,
physical and sexual abuse,
stress, and
quality of parenting
Development
 Development. Genetic and environmental factors
interact with critical developmental stages in a
person’s life to affect addiction vulnerability.
 Although taking drugs at any age can lead to
addiction, the earlier that drug use begins, the more
likely it will progress to more serious abuse (i.e.
teens and adolescents)
 This is because areas in their brains that govern
decision making, judgment, and self-control are still
developing.
Through a Blue Lens
 youtube video for “Through a blue lens” -
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gwFRsfATaag
 Youtube video for “Operation X”
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rl9jS8oPtEc