Addiction to Drugs and Alcohol - A Disease?
___________________________________________________________________
Is addiction to drugs and is addiction
to alcohol a disease? Most authorities on the subject answer this question in the affirmative.
Alcoholism and drug addiction are chronic, long-term, often progressive diseases with symptoms
that include a strong need to take the drug or to drink in spite of detrimental consequences such as serious job,
relationship, legal, financial, and/or health problems. Please continue reading for more relevant information
about addiction to drugs and to alcohol.
Alcoholism, Tolerance, Withdrawal and Physical Addiction
Physical addiction takes place when an individual's body actually becomes dependent on a particular
substance.
Not only this, but it also means that a person develops a tolerance to that particular
substance, meaning that the user requires a larger dose than before to get the same "buzz" or "high."
When a person who is physically addicted stops using a substance such as alcohol or drugs,
unfortunately, he or she typically suffers from withdrawal symptoms.
Withdrawal is defined as any physical or emotional disturbance experienced by an addict when
deprived of the particular drug or substance.
Withdrawal symptoms vary from drug to drug. The seriousness of withdrawal symptoms is highly
dependant on the drug or drugs that were abused by the addict.
Withdrawal symptoms for many individuals, are similar to having the flu. Typical withdrawal
symptoms include mood swings, sweating, depression, diarrhea, shaking, muscle aches, and craving for drugs or
alcohol.
Some Basic Addiction and Dependency Facts
Like many other diseases, drug and alcohol dependency have recognizable symptoms, a fairly
predictable course, and are influenced by environmental and genetic factors that are becoming better defined and
understood every year due to research and case studies.

Addiction means a person has no control over whether he or she uses drugs or alcohol. A
person who is addicted to drugs or alcohol has grown so used to the substance that he or she simply "needs" to have
the substance in order to "feel right" or to function. Addiction can be psychological, physical, or both.
The Dangers of Psychological Addiction
Psychological addiction occurs when the cravings for a drug are psychological
or emotional. People who are psychologically addicted feel overcome by the desire to have the drug in question.
These feelings are so strong that in many instances psychologically and physically addicted
individuals will do almost anything for their next "fix" including lying, stealing, and in some instances,
killing.
Many times people abuse drugs or alcohol in order to have "fun" or to get a "buzz."
Many individuals, in fact, report that having a few drinks makes them feel more comfortable in
social situations. The danger, however, is this: repeated drug or alcohol abuse can result in
addiction.
When person is addicted, he or she no longer takes drugs or alcohol to have fun or to get
high. Rather, the addicted person needs the drugs or alcohol in order to function on a daily basis.
In fact, in many instances, the addicted person's everyday life centers around satisfying her or
his need for the substance to which she or he is addicted.
|
As far as the validity of blood alcohol tests is concerned, they are the most
accurate method in use today for testing a person's blood alcohol content. Blood alcohol tests
have the following characteristics: they are the most intrusive method for testing blood alcohol
concentration (BAC); they are the most accurate method for testing a person's BAC; they are the
most expensive method to testing a person's BAC; and due mainly to their high cost and to their
intrusiveness, blood tests are the least common method for testing a person’s BAC.
|
Addiction to Drugs and Alcohol - A Disease: Conclusion
It is truly unfortunate that the "fun" and the "buzz" that many people experience when drinking
often motivates them to drink more each time they drink and to drink more frequently.
At some point, however, the line between alcohol abuse and alcoholism gets fuzzy as the person
gradually becomes more reliant on alcohol until he or she simply needs to drink in order to function. Is
addiction to drugs and alcohol a disease?
Once a person loses control over the frequency and the amount of alcohol he or she drinks, the
answer is unfortunately, "yes." In fact, not unlike silent killers such as high cholesterol and high blood
pressure, realizing the effects of alcohol dependency may come too little, too late.
| In Canada, an estimated 4% of the population over the age of 15 is dependent on
alcohol and there are twice as many male alcoholics as female alcoholics. The highest rate of
alcoholism in Canadians occurs between the ages of 20 and 24. In Canadian surveys, about 20%
of the current and former drinkers stated that their alcoholic drinking negatively affected them,
usually affecting their finances or their jobs. |
|
The following represents mild to moderate physical withdrawal symptoms that
typically occur within 6 to 48 hours after the last alcoholic drink: enlarged or dilated pupils,
pulsating headaches, tremor of the hands, loss of appetite, vomiting, clammy skin, abnormal
movements, sweating (especially on the palms of the hands or on the face), rapid heart rate,
looking pale, involuntary movements of the eyelids, sleeping difficulties, and nausea.
|
______________________________________________________
|