The Growing Trend Of Drug Abuse In America - What's The Solution? One of the most tremendous Health issues in America all boils down to one complication: Drug Abuse. In the past following years, beginning of the 21st Century, ranging from 2002-2005, not to mention the amount of Drug utilization among ages 18 and older has amounted to 3.5 million people in that following year, regulating to the amount of 180.9 billion dollars of the Economic cost in Drug abuse in the United States. In the next upcoming year, 2003, more than 25,000 people died from Drug-induced effects; many of which are children caused by second hand due to the chemicals in the house. In addition, Many children are getting diseases from picking up the leftover needles used …show more content…
Drugs are not good for anyone but they can affect teens the most, due to the fact that their body is still growing. This is why teens can not drink until the age of 21, when the body is done developing. Not to mention, the drugs will damage their brain, heart, and other organs, including that some drugs can give them a heart attack. When teens do drugs, they are less able to do well in school, sports, and other extracurricular activities. This is usually how teens drop out of school due to poor decisions and lack of care. Teens usually go through phases in their life, like going through the phase of trying to fit in or feel temporarily numb to the feeling or because they may be depressed. Drugs will not solve your problems, In Fact they only cause problems on top of the ones you already had. This is when their body becomes addicted that without the drug, they cannot function correctly. Many teens still in school usually start smoking, or using snuff that contains the most addictive drug in the U.S, Nicotine. By the same token, many harmful chemicals are in Nicotine, including: Carbon monoxide, Cyanide, Ammonia and 4,000 other chemicals, them being some of them. Although Nicotine isn't illegal, if over the age of 18, it is still very harmful and it can lead to illegal Drug use if not careful. The only way to stop teens from falling into these …show more content…
neither the less, many, many times when a parent is in the same household as their children, who are consuming drugs, this means there is a lot of neglection towards the children.As a result, there has been many cases that have had to do with child abuse and its most likely that the parent was on drugs. From cases of abuse, rape, trading for drugs, to leaving the child unattended to be hurt. The innocence of the matter is that children who experience this abuse are most likely to receive Depression, Drug Addiction, Schizophrenia, and many, many health problems, addressed from the studies of Harvard University. The types of abuse range from physical, sexual, verbal, and emotional abuse. Again, how are we going to change this is the real question to focus on and find solutions for. This is where CPS, Protective Services, the name of a government agency responsible for providing protection to children, in addition, investigates families who are suspicious for abuse and neglect of children in the household. I've come to believe that CPS should do monthly investigations by obtaining a search warrant or for it to be allowed to do so. Nonetheless, this is so CPS can make sure children are safe in their household, and that there is no drug abuse or any abuse around and to their children. CPS can go from house to house talking to parents finding anything suspicious
They stimulate parts of the brain, killing off others for short term, artificial highs. For every up there is a down, and for every high, there is irreparable damage to the brain. Adolescents are at an important crossroad in the development of their brains. Their brains are working overtime to develop important reasoning, critical thinkings, and decision making skills for later life. Teenagers who use drugs halt the progress their brain makes on these fronts, and are bound to remain irresponsible and teenager-like well into adulthood. This is the cause of crime in our society. When people use drugs, they can no longer make the decisions necessary to understand the consequences of their actions. This causes people to self-destruct and cause harm to themselves and their personal
Nonmedical Prescription-Opioid abuse in the United States and Michigan has continued to rise, and with it, the devastating results that accompany it. Research has shown that increased opioid abuse leads to an increase in overdose and death, increases in crime and increased incidences of costly blood borne diseases like HIV, AIDS and Hepatitis. It also leads to increased societal costs, such as an increasing number of children in foster care and increased healthcare, workplace and criminal justice costs that can decimate communities and local budgets. Many communities were caught with their heads in the sand, as they were overwhelmed by the influx of prescription opioids into their communities. When policies were finally implemented to curb the amount of prescription opioids in their communities, rates of heroin use (also an opioid) began to skyrocket and people began realizing they had an opioid epidemic on their hands. How to combat this heroin epidemic has been the topic of many debates. This article will attempt to examine the relationship of nonmedical prescription-opioid abuse and its effects on heroin use.
Nonmedical Prescription-Opioid abuse in the United States and Michigan has continued to rise, and with it, the devastating results that accompany it. Research has shown that increased opioid abuse leads to an increase in overdose and death, increases in crime and increased incidences of costly blood borne diseases like HIV, AIDS and Hepatitis. It also leads to increased societal costs, such as an increasing number of children in foster care and increased healthcare, workplace and criminal justice costs that can decimate communities and local budgets. Many communities were caught with their heads in the sand, as they were overwhelmed by the influx of prescription opioids into their communities. When policies were finally implemented to curb the amount of prescription opioids in their communities, rates of heroin use (also an opioid) began to skyrocket and people began realizing they had an opioid epidemic on their hands. How to combat this heroin epidemic has been the topic of many debates. This article will attempt to examine the relationship of nonmedical prescription-opioid abuse and its effects on heroin use.
Drug abuse is an increasing problem in our society, and specifically among teenagers. This increased affiliation with substances is very detrimental to teens. It causes an inability to focus, increases the chance that you will continue your drug abuse through your adulthood and it greatly damages the brain and many other organs. Our brains are developing when we are in our adolescence, which is why it is very important to discourage kids experimenting with drugs.
Drugs have killed numerous people or caused them to go crazy and addicted. From kids doing it at an early age trying to “be cool” or to just fit in which can lead to a serious issue. Most people become addicted no matter what the age. This shows how even once considered an adult and thinking it is okay since they are now old enough to do what they want like drugs it mostly ends up being costly to the life of themselves.
The two kinds of abuse, physical and mental, can have dramatic affects on every individual. Physical abuse is typically apparent, and easy to recognize. Slavery in America was considered a form of physical abuse and it was easy to see through hangings, lashes, and brutality demonstrated that African Americans were under physical abuse. Mental abuse, however, is often difficult to argue as bruises do not show on one's arm from constant mistreatment through unequal pay, educational inequality, and racism. Black Americans continue to face both kinds of abuse and are subjected to consistent inequality. Because of the tone of one's skin, black Americans receive poor education and a lower chance for success. Although physical abuse toward black Americans
As the number of intravenous drug users continues to rise, so does the risk of dangerous and potentially fatal complications that are associated with illicit drug use. In this population, death rates are higher due to overdose, AIDs-related mortality, and other blood-borne viruses (Mathers et al., 2013). Mortality rates remain high even though precautions have been taken to reduce them. According to Lavender & McCarron (2013), “Mortality in injecting drug users is up to 22 times higher than for the age-adjusted population, despite increased provision of needle and syringe programs, reduced needle and syringe sharing, and higher uptake of hepatitis B vaccination” (p. 511).
Addicted parents spend a significant amount of time searching for drugs or alcohol and must spend time to obtain money to pay for their “fixes” whether by illegal or legal means. They have to have time to recover from hangovers or withdrawal symptoms. This constant cycle of obtaining, using and coming down from drugs leaves little time left over for their children. Social systems are overwhelmed by the number of children which need care from someone other than their addicted parents. Approximately, eighty percent of the children who enter foster care come from homes of addicted parents (Taylor 2011). Their stay in foster care is lengthened by the need for their parents to meet judicial rehabilitation requirements before being returned to their homes. In addition, these children having come from non-supportive and abusive environments require foster parents who are able to cope with issues of behavioral
Not only does substance abuse receive a lot of attention from the media and government, but also there is a response medically to this ongoing social problem. More often times than not, substance abuse will cause one to receive medical treatment. With the numerous of overdoses and close calls that have been mentioned through the media, it is also important to recognize that substance abuse can lead to infectious diseases. With desperate addicts sharing needles that could lead to HIV/AIDS or other blood infectious diseases, health care along with federal funding came up with five year pilot program for California where it
Every minute twenty four people are victims of abuse in the United States, that’s more than 12 million women a year. People seem to wear a mask until they are behind closed doors. Abuse has affected the victim and suspect both and there are many reasons for everything.
America’s drug problem has increasingly become an epidemic. In a 2013 study done by the National Institute on Drug Abuse, 24.6 million Americans, 9.4% of the population,
Imagine yourself on an abandoned road in a scorching weather with only very less water left in your water container and if you don’t drink the left water, you might faint due to dehydration. Suddenly, you notice a stranger who looks in a very pathetic condition running towards you and asks for some water. Would you offer your water container? Maybe? Maybe not? Who knows? One does not simply face such kind of situations, especially if they live in developed countries such as the United States. America has indeed one of the best economies in the world and is very capable of not just providing sufficient basic needs to its citizens but is also most often left with surplus. And so the question arises- where does all this surplus or we should say
Drug use in America is one of the major issues we face and the problem has skyrocketed over the past three decades. Heroin and painkiller addictions exceed all other countries. It is important that we address some of the causes that lead to the abuse, how to treat the abuse, and how to prevent the distribution of illegal prescription drugs.
Since 2000, the drug use rate in America has risen to the highest it’s ever been. In a survey done in 2009, 8.7 percent of people age 12 and up said that they used illegal substances within a month of taking the survey, a 9 percent increase since 2008 (Abuse, National Institute on Drug, 2010). This statistic alone is very concerning due to
Children and teenagers also face dangers when they use drugs, often beginning to experiment with drugs in grade school. According to a recent USA Today article, children between the ages of 12 and 17 who use marijuana, tobacco, and alcohol are 266 times more likely to use cocaine than those who do not use those three substances. Children who use drugs learn less, are absent from school more often, quit school more frequently,