The topic of my Social Injustice project is Drug Abuse. I am going to be discussing drug abuse in the novel, To Kill A Mockingbird and also in real life situations. I will be comparing the ways of drug abuse in the 1930's to the world now. In the novel, the main drug abusers are Mrs. Dubose who is addicted to Morphine, and Bob Ewell, who is an alcoholic. In today's world, a good example of a drug abuser is Lindsay Lohan. The drugs involved in the novel are Morphine and Alcohol. Mrs. Dubose was
When you hear the term “alcoholic,”or “addict,” people automatically think of someone who drinks, or does drug abuse too much and whose life is falling apart as a result. Maybe that is the problem or truth , or maybe it’s not. Alcohol and drug abuse should be prevented. These two cases we don 't see very often, maybe we hear about it every now and then but, it 's happening all around us, way more than we think. Teens are involved more than adults, when it comes to drinking and smoking. Although
Drug use is a controversial issue where different people have different opinions. It varies from individual to individual, from society to a way of life, and from legal to illegal. Drugs become abused whether they are recreational, narcotics or alcohol. When we talk about the misuse of substances and how they are used for the wrong reason without regulations that put the person at risk without taking that into account. It is like gambling when an individual use recreational drugs or abuse narcotics
Reduce the Abuse Prescription opioid pain relievers account for more deaths than both cocaine and heroin combined (Stewart). The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention estimate that the fatal overdoses caused by prescription drugs is around 26,000 a year in the United States (Szabo). Prescription drug abuse is becoming a greater threat each day. It has become an epidemic, especially in the United States. As of 2011, 75% of the world’s opioid prescription drugs were prescribed and consumed in
has kept the level of inmate drug abuse constant over the past decade despite concerted efforts to reduce it. A recent increase in cell-phone smuggling has complicated matters, with inmates sometimes using phones to arrange drug deliveries. It seems that the prison wall has become less and less of a secure boundary. The mention of the game “Whac-a-Mole,” where, as soon as one pesky mole is smashed, another pops up, is applied numerous times to this endless battle. Drugs reach inmates in many well
population abusing prescription drugs. However; Oye I. Owolewa writes in her article “What the District could do to curb prescription-drug abuse” explaining that instituting a daily or weekly prescription drug return system will significantly reduce prescription drug abuse both now and in the future. According to the Center of Disease Control (CDC) young adults aged 18-25 are the most common prescription drug abusers. It is estimated that two thirds of prescription drug abusers get the medication from
About 10 years ago drug abuse was diagnosed in nearly 22.6 million people in the United States. Broken families, time spent in jail, sexually related diseases and death are common consequences of drug addiction. Addiction related disease pose a major load on society every single day, costing our economy more than $500 billion just annually. That is about $181 billion for illegal drugs alone. Drug users are more likely to have workplace accidents, harming themselves and also fellow employees around
official, the ongoing scourge of prescription-drug addiction is beginning to reach epidemic proportions, ballooning about 75 percent in the United States within the past five years (“Prescription-drug Abuse Escalates”). Prescription drugs have become extremely overused due to the pain killing aspects, along with a sort of “high” when they are being abused. This high has been something people chase and will do anything to get. A report from the Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration
According to The National Institute on Drug Abuse, “addiction is a chronic, often relapsing brain disease that causes compulsive drug seeking and use, despite harmful consequences to the addicted individual and to those around him or her” (Drug Facts). Codependency disorder and drug addiction often go hand in hand; they feed into each other’s obsessions and unhealthy behaviors. The brains of those afflicted exhibit similar flaws within the prefrontal cortices. There has been speculation whether or
Prescription Drug Abuse among Teenagers ( 12-17 Years) Prescription Drugs are medications that are prescribed to patients by a doctor to help in many ways, such as relieve pain, treat symptoms of a disease, or to help fight an infection. They are very safe when used properly and under supervision of a physician, yet if used without approval of a doctor they can be very harmful and in some cases could lead to death. During your adolescence years, teens have curiosity which builds up and