Substance Related Disorders Basic Concepts Flashcards
What is abuse?
- self administration of any drug in a manner that diverts from the approved medical or social patterns within a culture
- non medical self administration of a substance to produce psychoactive effects, intoxication or altered body image, despite knowledge risks involved
Why do people take drugs initially?
To feel good, to feel better, to do good, and curiosity or peer pressure
What factors put people at a higher risk for development of substance related disorders?
Situational factors, psychosocial factors, biological factors and practical factors.
What are some situational factors that put people at a higher risk for development of substance related disorders?
Prisons, competitive sports, parties, raves.
What are some psychosocial factors that put people at a higher risk for development of substance related disorders?
Bereavement, loneliness, boredom, low income, lower educational level, social anxiety, stress, peer pressure, experimentation, role modelling by parent/sibling.
What are some biological factors that put people at a higher risk for development of substance related disorders?
Chronic pain, mental health disorders, genetic vulnerability.
What are some practical factors that put people at a higher risk for development of substance related disorders?
Availability of a substance, nature of the drug, and route of administration.
What are adverse consequences associated with substance abuse?
- physical illness (infections, irritant effects, decreased personal hygiene, weight gain)
- mental illness (hallucinations, depression, anxiety, mania)
- accidents
- education and employment difficulties
- housing instability
- social difficulties
- legal problems
Explain the Johnson Theory of Addiction.
People have low, normal or high mood. With repeated exposure, users go from high to low instead of from high to normal. Cravings is a part of it, and withdrawal is huge. This explains why individuals continue to use.
What is the biological explanation for why individuals continue to use?
All drugs of abuse directly or indirectly target the brain’s reward system by flooding the circuit with dopamine, motivating us to do it again and again.
Over time, the brain adjusts by producing less dopamine or down regulating receptors. So the reward circuit becomes hypo functional and the ability to experience any pleasure is reduced.
Now users have to take drugs to get a normal amount of dopamine function, and over time need larger amounts of drugs to create the dopamine high.
Define abstinence.
Voluntary restraint from using a substance, including alcohol.
Define addiction.
Intense persistent drug use associated with a strong desire to continue to use, with disregard to consequences or personal harm.
Define blackout.
An event that occurred during a period of heaving drinking which cannot be recalled by the individual.
Define dependence.
An inappropriate compulsion to take a substance regularly, which may cause physical or psychological impairment.
The user takes the drug ignored to feel and function in a way they feel is acceptable.
The user has lost control over their behaviour and now gives the drug greater priority over previously more important behaviours.
Define physical dependence.
A state in which the body has become dependent on the presence of the drug at a particular concentration, so that when the concentration falls, the user experiences physiological withdrawal signs and symptoms.