|
What Causes Drug Addiction and Alcoholism?
|
The
Downward Spiral
No one wants to be a drug addict
or alcoholic, but this doesnt stop people from getting addicted. The most
commonly asked question is simply - how? How could my son, daughter, father,
sister, or brother become a liar, a thief, someone who cannot be trusted? How
could this happen? And why wont they stop? |
 |
|
The first thing you
must understand about addiction is that alcohol and addictive drugs are
basically painkillers. They chemically kill physical or emotional pain and
alter the minds perception of reality. They make people numb. For drugs
to be attractive to a person, there must first be some underlying unhappiness,
sense of hopelessness, or physical pain.
Before we address the questions
of cause, here is a little background information
What Is A Drug?
In medical terms, a drug is any
substance that when taken into a living organism may modify one or more of its
functions. Drugs can provide temporary relief from unhealthy symptoms and/or
permanently supply the body with a necessary substance the body can no longer
make. Some drugs produce unwanted side affects. In large enough doses,
all drugs are toxic.Some drugs lead to an unhealthy dependency that has
both physiological and behavioral roots.
What Is Addiction?
Whether a person is genetically or
biochemically predisposed to addiction or alcoholism is a controversy that has
been debated for years within the scientific community. One school of thought
advocates the disease concept, embracing the notion that addiction
is an inherited disease, and that the individual is permanently ill at a
genetic level, even for those experiencing long periods of sobriety.
|
How Do
Drugs Affect The Mind?
The mind is our most important
tool. With our mind, we solve the problems we face in life. Drugs do several
things that harm ones ability to think or to be fully aware of the
present surroundings. These effects continue long after the effects of the drug
appear to have worn off.
Addictive drugs activate the
brains reward systems. The promise of reward is very intense causing the
individual to crave the drug and to focus their activities around taking the
drug. |
 |
The ability of addictive drugs to
strongly activate brain reward mechanisms and their ability to chemically alter
the normal functioning of these systems can produce an addiction. Drugs also
reduce a persons level of consciousness, harming the ability to think or
be fully aware of present surroundings.
After extended use, the person no
longer responds to the drug in the way that person initially responded. So for
example, in the case of heroin or morphine, tolerance develops rapidly to the
analgesic (painkilling) effects of the drug. While the development of tolerance
is not addiction, many drugs that produce tolerance also have addictive
potential.
The fact remains
that there is scientific research to support all of these concepts. The
question of whether addiction is genetic, behavioral or biochemical does not
have an absolute answer. The distinguishing feature of the condition commonly
referred to as addiction is the ability of the drug to dominate the
individuals behavior, regardless of whether physical dependence is also
produced by the drug. There are a wide variety of
treatment methods being used today, administered based on whatever school of
thought the treatment provider believes in. With a 16% to 20% recovery rate
based on statistical analysis of national averages, the message is clear that
we have a lot more to learn if we are to bring the national recovery rate to a
more desirable level.
There is another school of thought
that has proven to be more accurate. It has to do with the life cycle of
addiction. This data is universally applicable to addiction no matter which
hypothesis is used to explain the phenomenon of drug dependency. |
|
 |