Substance Use Essay

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    Substance Use Disorder in Nursing: A Complex Epidemic He is the best nurse on the floor. Everyone admires him – patients, fellow nurses, doctors, administration. He works extra shifts in the emergency department, sometimes as often as six shifts per week despite chronic back pain. What about the seasoned staff nurse? You notice a change in her. She is moody, appears dazed, and is making mistakes frequently. She is late and unkempt, and is not as social as she once was. While one may be quick to

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    Gwen Cummings (played by Sandra Bullock), an alcoholic, who crashes a stolen limousine while intoxicated on the day of her sister’s wedding. She is then court-ordered to a rehabilitation center for 28 days to be treated for Substance Use Disorder (SUD), specifically for Alcohol Use Disorder (AUD). At first, she is reluctant from participating in any treatment programs and refuses to admit that she is an alcoholic. This film shows Gwen’s journey to recovery, where she struggles through withdrawal, has

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    Substance use disorder is not a brain disease, and it will be proven in this paper. Drugs are addicting, and habit forming. Does this make it a brain disease? There can be many different brain diseases, including infections, seizures, trauma, tumors, etc. People could become dependent on a drug the first time they use it, or after chronic use. It really depends on their tolerance to that particular drug. The fact-based accounts from recovered addicts commonly point to the role of monetary and family

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    The Relationship between Abuse and Substance Use Disorders (SUD's). How can one discern abuse from an SUD? Abuse and SUD can be separated by categories. The Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders, Fifth Edition (DSM-5), define substance use disorders that are mild, moderate, or severe. It is within these levels that certain criteria’s are meet Substance use disorders occur when the recurrent use of alcohol and/or drugs causes clinically and functionally significant impairment, such

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    Critique of substance use interview The use of substance is not a new subject in the history of human kind. In the past, elderly group of population were more habituated comparing to that of adolescent. Currently, the significant number of adolescent has been affected by the substance abuse. Substance abuse is defined as the use of toxic psycho stimulant or depressant substances which may be multiple drugs or alcohol. The types of substance that are commonly used are alcohol, cannabis, cocaine

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    Remission a new paradigm in Substance Use Disorder Treatment Addiction treatment is a complex and paradoxical issue. Despite the fact that most of the medical and academic institutions define addiction as a chronic brain disease, it is too often treated on an acute basis. Chronic conditions are defined by the World Health Organization (WHO) as requiring ongoing management over a period of years or decades and cover a wide range of health problems. The goals of chronic care are not to cure, but to

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    Exploring Comorbid Substance Use and Mental Illness Sarah L. Alford Kennesaw State University Exploring Comorbid Substance Use and Mental Illness There is a wealth of literature about the relationship between substance use and mental illness. Bahorik, Newhill, and Eack (2013) reported that individuals who have a mental illness have a higher prevalence rate of substance use than individuals who do not have a mental illness. Fluery, Grenier, Bamvita, Perreault, and Caron (2014) cite that at least

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    In the HBO documentary video, Dr. Nora Volkow, the director of the National Institute on Drug Abuse, discusses different aspects of substance use disorder. She reminds us that addiction is a chronic, relapsing disease, that changes the brain’s neurochemistry. Dr. Volkow talks about different factors that make people more vulnerable to abusing substances, comments on adolescents addicts and relapse, and identifies the characteristics of an effective treatment. Volkow focuses exclusively on neuroscience

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    US citizens age 18 and older live with a brain disorder combined with another problem. To put it another way, almost 1/5th of the US population lives with mental illness and either a substance use disorder or some other issue (SAMHSA, 2016). A co-occurring problem is defined as the coexistence of both a substance use disorder and mental health problem (SAMSHA, 2016). Other examples of co-occurring problems include pathological gambling, eating disorders and those previously stated are all treatable

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    Introduction to Addictions and Substance Use Disorders Cognitive-Behavioral Models The cognitive behavioral models say that incentives make way for the right conditions for the need for drug abuse. Drug use is associated with experiences such as self-exploration, religious insights, altering moods, escaping boredom or despair, enhancing creativity, performance, sensory experience or pleasure, and so on (Capuzzi & Stauffer, 2012). Cognitive behaviorism has brought in appreciated data at the same

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