addiciton Flashcards
salience
: This refers to when the particular activity becomes the most important activity in the addict’s life and dominates their thinking, feelings and behaviour. For instance, even if the person is not actually engaged in the addictive behaviour, they will be thinking about the next time they will be.
mood modification
This refers to the subjective experience that people report as a consequence of engaging in the particular activity. The person’s drug or activity of choice can have the capacity to achieve different mood modifying effects at different times. For instance, a nicotine addict may use cigarettes first thing in the morning to get the arousing ‘nicotine rush’ they need to get going for the day. By the end of the day they may not be using nicotine for its stimulant qualities, but may in fact be using nicotine as a way of destressing and relaxing.
tolerance
the process of increasing amounts of the particular activity are required to achieve the former effects. The classic example of tolerance is a heroin addict’s need to increase the size of their ‘fix’ to get the type of feeling (e.g. an intense ‘rush’) they once got from much smaller doses.
withdrawal symptoms
These refer to the unpleasant feelings, states and/or physical effects that occur when the particular activity is discontinued or suddenly reduced. Such withdrawal effects may be psychological (e.g. extreme moodiness and irritability) or more physiological (e.g. nausea, sweats, headaches, insomnia and other stress-related reactions).
conflict
This refers to conflicts between the addict and those around them (interpersonal conflict) or from within the individual themselves (intrapsychic conflict), which are concerned with the particular activity. Continual choosing of short-term pleasure and relief leads to disregard of adverse consequences and long-term damage, which in turn increases the apparent need for the addictive activity as a coping strategy.
relapse
This refers to the tendency for repeated reversions to earlier patterns of the particular activity to recur and, for even the most extreme patterns typical of the height of the addiction, to be quickly restored after many years of abstinence or control. The classic example of relapse behaviour is in smokers who often give up for a period of time only to return to full-time smoking after a few cigarettes.
preoccupation
when the addict is engrossed by their addictive stimulus
persistence
continuing to engage in the addictive stimulus despite difficulty and conflict
perceived
where the addict feels like they’ve lost control when in fact they may not have
progression
continuing to engage in the addictive stimulus more and more as tolerance increases