Imagine being in a room with a bunch of other people. You’re all sitting in a circle in chairs. Everyone there has an addiction. Whether they are addicted to drugs, alcohol, random sex acts, or even eating disorders. All of these are considered some sort of addiction. You are there because you have abused some sort of substance. Luckily for you, your family staged an intervention and they have convinced you to go to AA meetings. However, other individuals are not so lucky. They get in situations they cannot get out of. They overdose on strong drugs, or they die from diseases caused by drugs or alcohol. Addiction is a widespread problem, due to the environment that people put themselves into and their genetic makeup. Narconon is a drug program …show more content…
You cannot relapse onto another drug. Eventually, you will end up back on the same drug. The best way to stop an addiction, is to stop using all addictive substances. One substance can lead you to any other substance. As said by Dr. Steven M. Melemis, “Even moderate drinking or smoking marijuana lowers your inhibitions, which makes it harder for you to make the right choices”(Dr. Steven Melemis, I Want to Change My Life, 2017). You have to cut off all addictive substances. Otherwise, you’re not doing yourself any favors and you won’t stop the addictive trait. Eventually you will pick up where you left off (Dr. Steven Melemis, I Want to Change My Life, …show more content…
One main thing that it affects is the brain. When you are doing something you enjoy, your brain releases dopamine. Dopamine is a chemical compound that is commonly known to occur as a reward. This “reward” causes the person to want to continue doing what gives them that good feeling. The release of dopamine can cause someone’s addiction to get worse. The surplus of dopamine can cause people to lose the ability to find pleasure in activities. The person ends up relying on their substance to feel good. After a while they build up a tolerance, therefore, they have to up the dosages on their substance. This is so they can still achieve that good feeling. Drugs hurt the communication system of humans. They also affect how people can think through problems. Researchers have found that people who have an addiction, they also have other medical problems. Some of those medical problems could include cancer or other diseases (“Drugs, Brains, and Behavior: The Science of Addiction”, 2007, pg. 1-30).
Being addicted to any substance can lead to major health issues. When you inject drugs you are at a higher risk of receiving AIDS, hepatitis C, and liver problems. Drugs can also lead people down a dangerous path. They start to be careless, so sexually transmitted diseases are found more in addicts. They have a very high risk of being careless during sexual behaviors (“Drugs, Brains, and Behavior…, 2007, pg.
The negative impact the drugs and alcohol abuse and addiction has on the overall health of the user must be considered. Every process and system in the body is adversely affected by the over-indulgence of drugs and alcohol. Some of the health problems regularly noted include organ damage, kidney and liver disease, organ failure, congestive heart failure, respiratory depression, memory lapses, brain damage, infection, stroke, heart attack, and overdose.
S203). In addition to the severe consequences drug abuse has on health, the social consequences are just as severe and includes increased crime and imprisonment, physical and mental disabilities, and loss of productivity.
Some of the psychological effects are paranoia, depression, or suicidal thoughts. Some physical effects are rapid heartbeat, sleepiness, HIV, hepatitis from sharing needles, and respiratory problems. “Once you get started, it can be very hard to stop”. (Calabria et al., 2010, as cited in Cooner & Mitterer, 2016, p. 181). For example, I know someone that decided to try marijuana for the first time. What he did not know was the person had put cocaine in with it. After trying it that first time he did eventually become addicted to drugs and he even started doing heroin. Drugs affect three parts of the brain the cortex, limbic system, and the brain stem. Drug addiction affects the way the brain communicate and the way neurons send, receive, and process information. “Addictive drugs increase dopamine activity.” (Boyd, Harris, & Knight, 2012, as cited in Cooner & Mitterer, 2016, p.
The physical, emotional, and psychological effects of addiction have the potential to make the addict vulnerable to a great many symptoms and disorders including paranoia, depression, anxiety, PTSD and other co-existing mental disorders, cancer, cardiovascular disease, stroke, heart attack, organ failure, hepatitis B & C, memory lapses, incontinence, poor oral health and gum disease, skin lesions and disease, and many more.
addicted persons encounter include, difficulty in holding jobs, maintaining stable marriages, making and keeping friends, obeying laws, and functioning as caring and responsible parents. These difficulties are related to the fact that getting and using drugs leaves little time for other activities.
Narcotic Anonymous (NA) is a place where group of people, men and women gather together several times a week or month with the desire to stop using narcotics. This program started around the late 1940s which was taken from the idea of Alcoholic Anonymous (NA World Services, 2014). People who attend NA participates either because it was a court order or its their own willingness to get better. Narcotic Anonymous is an outlet for narcotic addicts to find people who share their own struggle in overcoming narcotic addiction; It can also provide resources on how to stay clean and stop using illicit drugs. NA welcome every participant from different ages, races and type of addiction.
There are many health effects of drug and alcohol addiction. Some report flu-like symptoms, headaches, IBS and other gastric disorders, sleep disturbances, memory lapses and blackouts, and life-threatening effects such as stroke, heart attack, overdose, organ failure, cancer, and many more.
Transition Narcotics Anonymous has had a long history, bringing me to explain how NA has an impact on today 's society.
First of all, there is the Structural-Functional perspective way people view drug addiction as. The structural-functional perspective is the role the drugs do for the person or the weakening of the norms. It is the way they affect the person and what it does to them that makes them be addicted to drugs. For some people drugs relieves them. It takes them away from their problems from a while and they feel stress free and because of that feeling they receive from the drugs they like it and continue to take more and more. Those with this type of perspective well most likely disagree with this view of drug addiction and would want the problem to decrease.
Drugs some use them to escape pain, others use them for pleasure, and some use them to just fit in. Either way drugs are a harmful substance that may seriously affect the body. Drugs mess with the brain in ways that we couldn’t even imagine. From destroying brain cells that help with critical thinking to destroying cells that give us the ability to feel pleasure. Drugs take the place of our natural body functions of the body. They fool receptors of the body and make it to where our bodies produce less of what we need. Over a period of time this may produce very severe consequences on the body. With all the risks involved with drugs it’s a wonder why some people use them.
When people start taking drugs, they don't plan to get addicted. They like how the drug makes them feel. They believe they can control how much and how often they take the drug. However, drugs change the brain. Those who use drugs start to need the drug just to feel normal. That is addiction, and it can quickly take over a person's life.
The consequences that follow the use of any drug are unfavorable. Although many individuals may see drug addiction as a mere lifestyle choice, it is a problem that many individuals suffer from and inevitably a growing issue that leaves major social and economic impacts.
This then results in lack of control when the same outcome can no longer be established. This leads to increasing dosage or behavior to try and achieve the same high or to possibly better it. Substance addictions leave the body constantly craving a good feeling despite the consequences they may have. In order to understand the real mentality of someone with addiction/s is to examine a person in a philosophical and psychological way.
One of the most devastating side effects of drug addiction and abuse is depression. Depression is the result of chemical imbalance, environmental influence, or a combination of both. Using heavy and very highly addictive drugs as heroin, cocaine, opium and many other will cause sudden mood changes, deterioration of the immune system, nervous breakdowns, unusual flares of temper and many other side effects. Besides physical side effects, drug addiction can create problems in a person's social circles. The person may run into many conflicts with his family and friends, resulting in desire for isolation. This in turn will create more problems since the person will have no social support. Furthermore, drug addiction is a financial strain especially for teenagers. When a person is addicted to drugs he will do anything to obtain money to fulfill his needs.
One of the more common addictions that were mentioned is substance or drug addiction. In the medical dictionary substance abuse means, “Excessive use of a potentially addictive substance, especially one that may modify body functions, such as drugs.” The effects of substance abuse can show a discrepancy between physical and psychological effects. Essentially every drug has dissimilar physical effects on the body; they all have an effect on the brain initially in a similar manner. The physical effects of substance abuse includes; respiratory issues, cardiac issues, and even gastrointestinal issues. With these issues, they can get severe enough to lead up to further severe issues such as lung cancer, heart attacks, and kidney or liver damage, which can ultimately lead to death. The psychological effects of this addiction can be just as harmful. The psychological effects included; hypothermia, paranoia, anxiety, violent behavior, hallucinations, depression, loss of interest, loss sense of reality, confusion, flashbacks, sense of distance, and catatonic syndrome (which affects the body’s central