Front Back
history of drug use
widespread ancient urbanization> social problems technology>quality/pwr increased, trade>spread each culture has 2-4 approved drugs
Status Politics
Use of law and norms guiding particular behaviors to control minorities in an indirect but more or less deliberate manner. Ex: Black people - sagging is now a crime Prohibition controlled white ethnic immigrants
boundary setting
use of behavioral choices to determine group membership (in-group)
ancient societies: alcohol,opium, marijuana
drugs used for analgesic,religious, and euphoric effects opium,hashish,tobacco,hallucinogens,beer/wine cities emerge,state regulation of private behavior begins
medieval era
alcohol safer than h20 linked to islam capitalism orient to future
coffee and hemp
coffee linked with revolution in 1600s hemp grown in colonies
bayer 1800-1905
cocaine toothache drops heroin cough sedative
Harrison act
began as a tax law restricted entry to ports and mandated paper trails
Willam Randolph Hearst
newspaper magnate anti-Mexican sentiments
Harry J. Anslinger (pot)
-commissioner of US bureau of narcotics -1937- violence (gore files) -1948- a motivational syndrome -"the primary reason to outlaw marijuana is its effect on the degenerate races" 1937
1951 Boggs Act
Established mandatory minimum sentences for controlled substances. Didn't work.
4 Nasty Facts About the US
1. Highest Crime Rate 2. Highest Imprisonment Rate (Disproportionate in # of minorities) 3. Prison populations increased 4x since 1980 (35% due to drug war) 4. 4.1 decrease in users
deterrence: crime control policy
Severity is easily legislated but can only incapacitate.
War Mentality
•“Us versus them” = absolute good versus absolute evil justifies force-Evil originates in the enemy, not “us” •Emphasizes power & unity of the whole (society) •Any means are justified to achieve our ends oThe enemy is more evil than any ethical violation we may “need” to commit. •Disc…
drug war goals
curtail use/protect youth reduce drug related crime, public health expenses enforce morality/set boundaries
use vs addiction
use rooted in psycho-social factors addiction in bio-psychological ones
use & addiction
most users never become addicts biology,family of origin predict addiction
drive to alter Consciousness
use & addiction
Self- Medication
Use of tobacco, alcohol, or other drugs to soothe emotional reactions to stress substance or act used to change brain functions
compulsive behavoir
repeated despite expectation of consequences provide some sort of comfort often have premeditated components
Impulsive Behaviors
1. Acting before thinking - don't think about consequences 2. Emotional, reactive 3. May lead to or result from use 4. Involves habit
Moral-Temperance Model
Addiction results from evil. User is weak, criminal, sinful (moral) Some substances are inherently evil (temperance) Critical to policy, public opinion Justifies criminalization,drug war-especially targeting users over addicts. Basis of law matches the legal system. Most misguided …
Disease Model
Addiction is primary , chronic, and progressive disease, probably caused by genetic predisposition ~abstinence is only means of recovery ~recovery means (have not used)
medicalization
assets: explains irrational behavior encourages treatment-seeking relieves addicts and family's guilt problems: infers consistent symptoms, causes and consequences relieves user of responsibility treatment-growth will pwr and social support
Free Will vs Determinism
law presumes all people are equally able to make rational choices (equal under law) medicalization of deviance (drug the problem) step towards better understanding and greater compassion (confront addiction)
Substance abuse disorder (SAD) defined in DSM-V
maladaptive pattern of use leading to clinically significant impairment or distress
Addictive Experience
1. Post-use distress is worse than pre-use (guilt) 2. Critical roles are impaired 3. Crowds out sources of joy 4. More anticipation and excitement rather than contentment Better in the short run (quick fix) but worse in long run - less able to experience happiness, more prone to sad…
epigenetics
the way the environment influences the expression of a gene THE AFFECTED EPIGENOME IS PASSED DOWN TO THENEXT GENERATION.
What are the roots of addiction?
Genetics and family of origin. -Genetics: Dopamine reactivity, epigenetics, and self-medication issues. -Family of origin influences (esp 1st 4-6 years of life): Beliefs about self and others, coping abilities. -Peers, media, critical for use and not addiction.
Addiction Threshold
Point at which use becomes compulsive (via genetics, epigenetics, metabolism). Reached via biology, biography (what you have experienced), and use
Limbic-Prefrontal Interaction
1. Limbic has desire/emotion 2. Prefrontal either inhibits or plans 3. Distress can start in the limbic or the prefrontal (thoughts) 4. Prefrontal searches the environment, memory for the cause of distress and the solution.
individual are unique in:
size,activity level and developmental sophistication of different brain areas level of production and consumption of particular chemicals in various brain areas number, distribution and shape of receptors for various chemicals in particular brain areas (same factors that predispose…
dopamine
encodes desire for pleasure guides stress reactions attention movement
endorphins
pain medication, intestinal contraction (opiates, nicotine)
serotonin
IMPULSE CONTROL MOOD SLEEP SENSORY PERCEPTION
Abuse Predictors (All Drugs)
Impulsivity/Under Controlled Sensation Seekers. Family of origin>Epigenetics & Assumtions about self and others that guide perception and action. Sensitivity to a drug (impact Varies) Over half of causal factors inherited. Low frontal, high limbic, even as an adult. Over half of addi…
TISSUE DEPENDENCE
TISSUES AND ORGANS OF THE BODY COME TO DEPEND ON THE DRUG TO STAY IN BALANCE DESENSITIZATION OCCURS AND NEW LEVELS OF BRAIN/BODY FUNCTION COME TO BE THE NORM SUDDEN CHANGES CREATE PAINFUL WITHDRAWS (ALCOHOL, TRANQUILIZERS, OPIATES)
Brain reorganization
alteration of motivational pathways and related biochemistry reward, learning, and bonding systems are hijacked/modifies
Brain Disease or neural reorganization
brain networks are always changing to adapt to internal and external circumstances limbic- prefrontal paths convey survival needs, basic drives abnormally pwr path, enough pwr to imbalance paths or reward seeking
What are the hallmarks of addiction?
Tolerance and motivational toxicity. Tolerance: dose must increase to achieve same effects. (desensualization). Motivational toxicity: reduction of non-drug related motivations & ethics.(creates a cycle of guilt). Ability to perform critical role decisions Reliant on use to manage emo…
assumptions of addiction
assumptions about ourselves others and the world acquired early in life
entitlements
felt to be deserved or expected conscious or non-conscious
list central nervous system depressants
alcohol opiates tranquilizers tissue dependence and brain reorganization
alcohol effects on the brain
gaba-judgement,inhibition dopamine-reward seeking endorphin-sence of bliss,well-being serotonin-serenity glutamate-learning
World Alcohol Use Rates
Russia and Europe are the worst
World Alcohol Use Rates
Stimulation & sedation. They are a part of metabolization.
alcohol tissue dependency
tissue dependence in 6-8 weeks
polydrug abuse
misuse of more than 1 drug at a time
binge drinking
episodic intake of five or more alcoholic beverages for men or four or more drinks for women.
alcohol binge effects
alcohol poisoning=overdose more common than alcoholism impacts brain development (impacts brain development, smaller hippocampus and lower brain activity increases probability of later life alcoholism linked to depression (women)
How does alcohol uniquely impact women and children?
Women get a higher blood level faster due to fat content, body size, hormones, and stomach enzymes Children may suffer from fetal alcohol syndrome, symptoms include brain damage, central nervous system dysfunctions, lower IQ, poor motor skills and hand eye coordination, behavioral and le…
current epidemic in addiction
pain pills
opiates effects
very rapid tolerance, tissue dependency, little tissue damage
symptoms of heroin
appetite/digestion slowed digestion histamine release (runny nose, itching) small pupils, slow response to light
Severity of withdrawal symptoms is predicted by...
Dosage frequency of use (ritual) User expectations set and setting Fear delays de-tox, increases size of habit, crime
What are the Pharmaceutical Therapeutics?
Methodone (blocks other opiates, agonist, addictive, synthetic opiate. Naltrexone is an Antagonist Buprenorphine comfortable de-tox over 6 weeks. (partial antaginist; partial agonist. Occupies receptors with little psychoactive impact. Suboxyn=naloxone(blocks) + buprenorphine (reduces …
What are the Pharmaceutical Therapeutics?
sedative-euphoriant and hormonal properties popular w/body builders for steroid like effects recreational dose is very close to OD level
Minor Tranquilizers: benzodiazepines
drugs taken to reduce anxiety or tension (xanax)
Rohypnol
Benzodiazepine also called "date rape drug" 10x's more powerful than Valium and causes some memory loss
Hallucinogens
Create profound perceptual distortions, alter mood, and affect thinking. Examples are LSD and marijuana.
Tryptamine psychedelics
-preferred by recreational users -LSD, DMT, Rave drugs -some toad skins contain DMT -sold as tablets or small "blotter" paper -serotonin agonists
synesthesia
stimulation of one sensory organ results in an experience in another sense (seeing music)
Entheogen
Drugs thought to create religious experiences
phenylethylamines
stimulate and hallucinogenic effects
empathogen
heightens sense of empathy
entactogen
sense of touch effect of ecstacy
tryptamine vs phenylethylamines
: rave drugs, OD not fatal but can lead to psychosis (flashbacks) OD fatal, stimulant and psychedelic effects
How does tissue dependence differ from “brain disease/Reorganization in terms of drugs involved, brain areas affected and sym
impacts mainly the body’s routine functions as it renorms the functions of the mid/limbic and lower brain that control these functions (e.g. breathe, digestion). Sudden cessation of use produces relatively extreme withdrawals. TD occurs with alco
• How does Boundary setting differ from status politics? Be sure to define BOTH concepts. 3 points
Use of behavioral choices to determine group membership, especially between “in-group” and outcasts; a routine function of all societies : Use of law and norms guiding particular behaviors to control minorities in a
: How do 1:tryptamines differ from 2:phenylethyamines in terms of 1) effects on user, 2) dangerousness?
: How do 1:tryptamines differ from 2:phenylethyamines in terms of 1) effects on user, 2) dangerousness?
What does the term “entitlement” mean when used to refer to addict perceptions?
this is what a person wants, deserves or expects (plans on) occurring based on her/his desires/ needs of the moment, generally suggesting that the person should get special treatment when none is normally expected. Failure to examine the rationality of entitlements makes people/addicts a…
What is a rebound effect? Give two examples. What drugs are usually involved in the rebound effect?
Symptoms the opposite of those produced by the drug occur after euphoria fades as body rebalances. Includes hangovers and withdrawal; addiction unnecessary. ALL euphoriants have these effects
What is a “synergistic reaction”? What drugs are usually involved in synergistic reactions? II.
The exponential effect of mixing two CNS depressants which usually produces a super high but can result in seizure disorders or death. Opiates, Alcohol, tranquilizers/depressants antihistamines.
endorphins defn:
pain blockers that provide a sense of well-being and also control intestinal functions affecting nutrition. Opiates, alcohol & nicotine are agonists (sugars also
salvia
very brief high
ecstasy
more socially aggressive, heightens sexual experience, tranquility, users crave touch
ecstasy dangers
overheating of brain and dehydration can kill
Current Hallucinogenic Research
Psilocybin - spirituality (person became more open), death anxiety Ketamine - Depression relief Ecstasy - PTSD (changes fear chemical -> changes memory) Mescaline - Spirituality
symptoms of cannabis
relax, eat sleep forget and protect
symptoms of cannabis
memory impairment slowed motor responses lowers motivation for complex tasks, violence
inhalants
solvents-paint, glue massive damage to brain, organs nitrates (poppers)-sex industry refrigerants (freon)- potentially fatal) formaldehyde (embalming fluid) -bizarre behavior anesthetics (nitrous-oxide-laughing gas)
List of stimulants
-Cocaine -Amphetamines bath salts -Nicotine methamphetamine
Cocaine
Type: stimulant Pleasurable Effects: rush of euphoria, confidence, energy Adverse Effects: cardiovascular stress, suspiciousness, depressive crash
cocain toxity
Type: stimulant Pleasurable Effects: rush of euphoria, confidence, energy Adverse Effects: cardiovascular stress, suspiciousness, depressive crash
cocaine control loss predictors/causes
Escalation of use predicts loss of control
crack effects/racial groups
Escalation of use predicts loss of control
methamphetamine
aka: meth, crystal, crank last longer than cocaine
meth effects:
weight loss, tremors and tooth grinding repetivitve action and picking at face hostility, panic, paranoia reduced pleasure, 5lbs of toxins for each lb of meth
meth withdrawls and group preferral
30% more time to recover (anglo drug) common in tx. (last 6-12 hrs)
Stimulant Addictiveness
Speed in entering brain Distribution within brain Meth distributed thru-out brian Amount of dopamine elicited speed in clearing (exiting) brain Meth lingers longer than coke
bath salts
aura, ivory wave, loco-motion, vanilla sky high risk for OD
nicotine addictive mechanism
Brain Reorganization as with speed, coke 1.DA, NE released – dopamine depleted ¡Nerves frizzle – less able to feel pleasure
nicotine addictive mechanisms creates:
new acetylcholine receptors: ¡These require stimulation ¡Are partly deactivated by use 1st use sets up hippocampal “memory trace” use recalled as a pleasurable experience Boosts the desire to repeat use
us recreational drugs dependence rates
32%: tobacco 23% heroin 17% cocaine
prenatal effects of nicotine
thinner, lighter brain, all measurable forms of intelligence drop, respiratory problems
Dopamine-Releasing Behaviors
1. Food (Bulimia/Binging) 2. Relationships (Codependency) 3. Gambling 4. Sex 5. Cults 6. Performance (Workaholism) 7. Collection/Accumulation (Shopping) 8. Aggression/Rage/Violence 9. Media/Entertainment
process addictions
—Activity or process —Compulsive repetition of mood-altering behaviors, such as eating disorders, gambling, sexual activity, overwork, and shopping. —Not universally accepted as distinct disorders
Workaholism
1. Job central to identity/self-esteem (job is master status) 2. Health, relationships, spirit. neglected 3. Postpone rest and vacations 4. Takes on extra work 5. Perfectionism --> overly busy 6. Use of work to avoid intimacy 7. Effect to control via job role (control of family) 8.…
burn-out
—Emotional Exhaustion and reduced sense of personal accomplishment diminished interest. —Cynical view of clients — Feelings of helplessness, hopelessness & resentment. — Distinct from high Stress: feeling empty, devoid of motivation, and beyond caring
1: stress vs 2: burn-out
1: —Over engagement —Over reactive Emotions —Urgency & hyperactivity —Loss of energy —Anxiety disorders 2: —Disengagement —Emotionally detached —Helplessness & hopelessness —Loss of motivation, ideals & hope —Depression
difference in damage between 1: stress and 2: burn-out
biological damage and emotional damage
compare sex addicts with sex offenders
most are abuse victims 30% treated are women (women under represented)
Key Traits of Sexual addiction
Out-of-control ; Compulsive Obsessed - Neglect of other activities for sex Inordinate amount of resources/time spent on sex & recovery Sex/fantasy are main coping mechanism Increasing # of sexual experiences Mood changes with sexual activity Feels degraded, guilty afterwards
3 levels of sex addiction
level one- normal accepted behavior (low police priority harmless, minor crimes, obscene calls serious harm and severe consequences (public outrage, incest, rape)
Precursors to Sex Addiction
1. Early use of sexual pleasure to escape pain (usually by accident) 2. Shame regarding activities (esp. in teens) 3. Ritualization of settings, preparations (onset to compulsivity)
Core Beliefs of a sex addict
"I am basically a bad, unworthy person." "No one would love me as I am." "My needs will never be met if I have to depend on others." "Sex is my most important need."
double bind
contradictory demands require a person to violate one rule to follow another
suds
seemingly unimportant decisions
psychobiology
fantasy may overwhelm reality of perceptions. tolerance and withdrawal sub other addictions or shame reducing activities during remorse pd.
types of gamblers
risk takers-thrill seeking gamble w/others_-seek competition self-med- gamble to feel numb prefer isolated games- slots, bingo online poker
Four stages of problem gambling
a. Winning b. Losing c. Desperation Hopelessness
social networking for gambline
appears to support for emotional health and social life deepen previous mental-emotional issues companion sub. instant response
eating disorders
—Not clearly an addiction —Anorexia —Bulimia —Compulsive overeating/carb craving —Sufferers often OCD, perfectionists, —Serotonin implicated Most lethal of all mental disorders
anorexia
Lack of appetite or desire to eat
Bulimia
An eating disorder characterized by binges on large quantities of food, followed by purges of the food through vomiting or the use of laxatives.
Compulsive Eating
Eating disorder characterized by uncontrollable binge eating
What disease (eating disorder) has the highest premature fatality rate of any mental illness?
anorexia nervosa
Chemical Dependency vs. Process Addiction
Most process addicts have pre-existing mental disorders A small portion of chemical dependents have diagnosis prior to onset of abuse Process addictions grade off into bad habits
eating disorders lethal?
most lethal of all mental disorders
what treatment works
length cognitive therapy self-awareness/monitoring spirituality
cognitive therapy?
decision-making processes examined and irrational beliefs challenged
Minnesota model
Emerged at Hazelden in 1949 as a reaction to the reigning moral approach Alcoholism/Addiction is a multiphasic illness with physical, mental &spiritual aspects
12 Step Groups (AA, NA)
-Most widely used -High success rate -Support, meetings, change addictive thinking/behavior
Spiritual Model
AA and 12 Steps Relapse=sin or loss of contact with God Person responsible for addiction but not responsible for changing it
anonymity
avoids discrimination, promotes focus on length of sobriety, ability to serve others
focus of cbt
•Focus: Current, Conscious Thoughts & Choices
goals of cbt
Challenge and replace irrational assumptions/beliefs about self, others and the world that support/cause the self-talk that leads to irresponsible actions
Responsible Actions
1. Meets one's own needs (takes self-awareness) 2. Without interfering with others' efforts to meet theirs
how a addiction remains functional to an addict
Avoid, distract or substitute
1: assets and 2: liabilities for addiction
1: •Well-researched, •supports wide variety of trtmts •Here & now •1 symptom stressed 2: •Narrow focus on observable problems •Ignores past life, unconscious
confrontation
Direct feedback regarding client’s behavior/beliefs An appeal for honesty with self and others An appeal for responsible behavior Ranges from polite assertion to adversarial attacks Alternates with support May create defensiveness, close communication
Motivational Interviewing
•Let client’s goals, ethics guide therapy ▫i.e., client centered •Create dissonance between client’s actions & client’s goals/values •Move client slowly from denial to treatment-seeking on client’s terms •Best with client’s with the fewest, least serious issues •Keep client positive …
stages of recovery
1.Precontemplation. Denies that a problem exists. 2.Contemplation. A plan is made to change. 3.Preparation. Setting a quit date. 4.Action. An enormous commitment. 5.Maintenance. Focused to avoid relapse. 6.Termination. The problem no longer exists.
eeg biofeedback
•Usually based on brain maps •Desired patterns of electrical activity rewarded with video, audio •High efficacy rates (60-90%) •30 + sessions required,@ 3 per week ▫Costly, time consuming, requires commitment
spirituality
linked to long term recovery distinct from religion required to except in power greater than oneself addiction is loss of contact w/ AA members
pharmaceutical therapies
no magic bullets blockers, subs, reduce cravings, relieve rebound, create adverse reaction, address co-morbid Dx's
Discipline/ Parenting Patterns
•Authoritative- high control, high support •Authoritarian: high control, low support •Permissive: low control, high support •Neglectful: low control, low support
Troubled Family
Inconsistent Unpredictable & out of control Cold, hostile source of unreasonable demands Unstable, emotionally and/or physically dangerous
Malevolence Assumption
Evil begets evil, bad kid ↔ bad family Social or personal pathology as root cause Common view in treatment
enabling
attempts to rescue feels guilt over addiction attempts to control addict
2 Views of Family Impacts on Social/Behavioral Problems
1. Malevolence Assumption 2. Loss of family power as a latent function of progress
how does family modifies genetic predisposition affects behavior choices
Time horizon: capacity to consider future impacts of current choices 1.Ability to link means & outcomes, acts & consequences (vs. fatalism)
Children's Adaptive Roles
Personalities form in attempts to stabilize environment*** Seeks safety, normality Behavior patterns that may predispose to abuse, neurosis, crime Make adult mental health treatment more difficult Predicted by innate traits of child location in family (birth order)
what a child needs to know it:
—Disease concept ◦Relieve guilt, promote understanding, appropriate perception of addict —Blackouts ◦Explains many broken promises, reframes incidents that diminish child's sense of self-worth, importance —Personality Changes —Limbic/addicted parent vs. “regular” parent —Enabling …
Emotional Rules of AODA Households
Behavior-perception patterns common in addicts & their children Increases probability of self-medication Emotional dysfunction Poor coping abilities A “set up” for later addiction/compulsivity
do not talk about it:
—Denial —Secrecy —Poor interpersonal communication skills —Excuse-making
dont trust anyone
—Unpredictable parental behavior, co-alcoholic also ◦Broken promises —Embarrassment & insecurity —Mixed messages
dont feel
Deny emotions Further destabilization
families always need to be included in recovery:
vPersonalities have formed vFamily members see themselves as non-pathological but survival in a pathological situation assures that they too have issues vExpect fear, anger-resentment, guilt, manipulation vPatterns of interaction, coping & power must change
The Post-Treatment Family
-Expect fear, anger-resentment, guilt, manipulativeness -Children & spouse have had much responsibility AND POWER -Return of addict threatens this -Family interaction patterns organized around the addiction -Family loses this with recovery
5 brain function affect by dopamine?
stress pleasure time focus/salience movement

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