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Drug Abuse

Drug addiction is a complex disease that affects the brain and behavior. Repeated drug use leads to changes in the brain that challenge self-control and increase cravings. While initial drug use is often voluntary, addiction becomes compulsive due to changes in brain function and structure. Effective treatment requires addressing both the physical and psychological aspects of addiction through medication, therapy, and lifestyle changes.

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
250 views3 pages

Drug Abuse

Drug addiction is a complex disease that affects the brain and behavior. Repeated drug use leads to changes in the brain that challenge self-control and increase cravings. While initial drug use is often voluntary, addiction becomes compulsive due to changes in brain function and structure. Effective treatment requires addressing both the physical and psychological aspects of addiction through medication, therapy, and lifestyle changes.

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novita ramadini
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© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
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NOVITA RAMADINI

14519847
1PA09

DRUG ABUSE

Many people do not understand why or how people become addicted to drugs and alcohol.
There are many misconceptions about how addictions work. For example, some mistakenly
believe that those who use drugs lack moral principles or willpower and could stop using
drugs by simply choosing to do so. In reality, drug addiction is a complex disease and
quitting takes much more than good intentions.

Drugs change the brain in ways that make quitting difficult even for those who want to.
Fortunately, psychologists know more now than ever before about how drugs affect the
brain and have found treatments that can help people recover.

What is a drug addiction?

To begin, addiction is a chronic disease characterized by drug seeking and use that is
compulsive or difficult to control despite negative consequences. The initial decision to take
drugs is voluntary for most people, but repeated drug use can lead to brain changes that
challenge an addicted person’s self-control and interfere with their ability to resist intense
urges to take drugs.

How do addictions affect the brain?

The brain registers all pleasures in the same way whether it be from a satisfying meal,
monetary reward or drug use. In the brain, instances of pleasure are marked by releases in
certain neurotransmitters. All drugs of abuse cause a particularly powerful surge of
dopamine, providing a “shortcut” to the brain’s reward system. While these
neurotransmitters contribute to the experience of pleasure, they also play a role in memory
and learning. This motivates a person to take action and seek out the source of pleasure
from past experiences. For some, this explains how addiction becomes a learned behavior.

What are the risk factors for becoming an addict?


No one factor can predict if a person is going to become addicted to drugs. Instead, a
combination of factors influences the risk of addiction. The more risk factors a person has,
the higher chance that taking drugs can lead to addiction.

For example, the biology of someone can be a risk factor. The genes that a person is born
with account for about half of a person’s risk for addiction. Gender, ethnicity, and the
presence of other mental disorders all are potential risk factors. It has long been known that
addicts usually have an under active dopamine system that gives them a decreased capacity
to experience pleasure in their ordinary lives.

One’s environment also plays a factor. This includes family and friends, socioeconomic
status, stress, parental guidance and early exposure to toxic environments. For example,
growing up without both parents around will leave you at a risk to be exposed to drugs at a
younger age, thus resulting in an increase of possible addiction.

Why do people use drugs as a way to “escape” their life?

Most psychological addiction begins with feelings that are out of control. Strong emotions
like rage, jealousy, fear and hopelessness make some people feel helpless. To quell these
uncomfortable feelings, abusers turn to drugs or alcohol.

At first, turning to substances to soothe unpleasant feelings is a choice. No one wakes up in


the morning and decides they’re going to become a substance abuser or engage in a life-
threatening compulsion. However, at some point, the behavior or drug of choice becomes a
necessary ritual and takes over as the primary method of relieving strong feelings.

What are the different types of addictive behaviors?

The word addiction is used in several ways. One definition describes physical addiction,
meaning the biological state in which the body adapts to the presence of drugs. This
demonstrates itself by having a tolerance to drugs or the body reacting physically to triggers
and cues associated with the drugs. For example, an alcoholic that walks into a bar may
begin to sweat and get chills as they anxiously wait for their first drink.
However, there are also addictive behaviors that are psychologically based. People
commonly use drugs in reaction to being stressed, whether or not they have a physical
addiction. Since these psychologically based addictions are not based on drug or brain
effects, they can account for why people frequently switch addictive actions from one drug
to a completely different kind of drug. The focus of the addiction isn't what matters; it's the
need to take action under certain kinds of stress. Treating this kind of addiction requires an
understanding of how it works psychologically.

How do we treat addiction?

Psychological symptoms of addiction can be understood and treated, but not by dealing
with them as lack of motivation or faulty thinking. Just getting clean and sober may not
address the actual psychology of addiction. While breaking the physiological need for the
drug, this does not break the persons desire to “escape” everyday life. Breaking
psychological addiction requires a commitment to understanding the root causes of one’s
personal addictive behavior and getting free from the destructive cycle. One of the hardest
aspects of breaking psychological addiction is confronting unpleasant emotions, situations
and people instead of avoiding them. This may mean taking positive, productive and
proactive steps to manage a situation rather than swallowing the uncomfortable emotions it
evokes and ending up in a binge.

Research shows that combining addiction treatment medicines with behavioral therapy
ensures the best chance of success for most patients. Treatment approaches tailored to
each patient’s drug use patterns and any co-occurring medical, mental, and social problems
can lead to continued recovery.

Addiction to drugs and alcohol should be treated as a psychological issue in order to end it
completely. Understanding the psychology behind addictions allows us to help those with
addictions overcome their problem and begin to live again.

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