Substance dependence

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    1. Opioid dependence, in remission, in a controlled setting (PWC / ADC) The client has self-reported using heroin for 8 years. The client was using 3 and a half grams daily before his incarceration. The client has reported significant Impairment and distress due to his drug use. The client shows signs of impaired capacity to control substance-taking behaviors. The client has self-reported trying to stop using heroin and has attended several programs (HIDTA, Drug DORM) to stop his addiction. .…

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    Regular and heavy alcohol or drug consumption increases the chances of a person becoming dependent on the substance. After dependence has set in and the person, for whatever reason, stops drinking alcohol or using drugs, they will undergo detox. According to Bear River Health at Walloon Lake, an alcohol and drug rehab center in Boyne Falls, MI, detoxification is identified by the mild to severe physical and psychological withdrawal symptoms. This process is the first step the majority of drug…

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    Dsm-Iv Criteria

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    to identify substance dependence according to the DSS-IV criteria. First, is tolerance. For example, tolerance is described as a need for increased amounts of a substance to achieve intoxication or the desired effect. If a drug is continually used at the same dose, then, there is a diminished effect, which requires an increased quantity to achieve the desired effect (Hunte & Barry, 2012). The second pattern of substance abuse is withdrawal. Withdrawal is characterized as a substance that is…

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    trying to distinguish psychiatric symptoms in a mental disorder versus individuals with substance use and withdrawal. The method for NESARC consisted of assessing a wide range of drugs such tranquilizers, hallucinogens, crack, cannabis, and much more. The major findings demonstrate that many individuals meet personality, mood, and anxiety disorder tends to met the criteria for alcohol dependence and other drug dependence. In this case, many individuals are dealing with the concept of…

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    Love Addiction Analysis

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    Traditionally, substance dependence was a primary definition for an addiction. Today, an addiction can be defined as a continuous and compulsive condition where individuals crave/seek a stimuli that is required for survival despite the consequences for their actions (Burkett, 2012). There are many forms of addiction. However, love is one of the strongest sensations and emotions known to human beings (Reynaud, 2010). Love addiction can be a very powerful sensation that seems to distract…

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    in general it is recognized that an addiction can be to any substance (for example alcohol, amphetamines, cocaine, nicotine, opioids, sedatives, hallucinogens, inhalants, cannabis, phencyclidine, caffeine, and a wide variety of other substances), which, when ingested, cross the blood-brain barrier and alter the natural chemical behavior of the brain. It is also accepted that addiction includes dependency on "things" as well as substances, such things as gambling, eating, sex and pornography.…

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    categorized as the habitual taking of addictive substance despite negative consequences (Shaffer, 2012). The creation of BDZ in the 1960’s allowed the discontinuation of harmful and addicting barbiturates. The anxiolytic and hypnotic properties of BDZs help individuals who are experiencing insomnia and anxiety problems. Although BDZ can be helpful to some individuals in the treatment of anxiety disorders, they have potential for abuse and may cause dependence and addiction. Soon after the first…

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    Overcoming Addiction through Yoga It’s no secret that addiction is widespread is our today society. From food disorder, drug and substance addition, smoking and many more, there is a clear need to help people with their addictions. Overcoming addictions is no easy task. The process is both physically and emotionally consuming. Luckily, once you’ve decided to quit, yoga can help you. The practice of Yoga has been around since early 500 BC. The tradition offers a way to deal with addictions by…

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    Memoirs of an Addicted Brain is an autobiographical novel that follows the stages of Mark Lewis’s life as an addict. Lewis begins the novel from when he was a young boy exploring the effects alcohol had on his behavior, then a young student experimenting with psychoactive drugs in San Francisco, becoming a heroin addict, and finally overcoming his extreme opiate addiction and becoming a respectable neuroscientist. His journey from the age of fifteen to thirty involves taking every drug he could…

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    Chi-Square Test

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    In the Chi-Square test table below, the “Asymp. Sig. (2-tailed)” determines the level of confidence. This particular level of confidence is less than 0.5, which means the difference is statistically significant. The null hypothesis is thus rejected. Chi-Square Tests Value df Asymp. Sig. (2-sided) Pearson Chi-Square 12.747a 6 .047 Likelihood Ratio 13.057 6 .042 Linear-by-Linear Association 5.178 1 .023 N of Valid Cases 742 Correlation and Regression with SPSS Pearson’s r value and…

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