Understanding Drug Abuse and Addiction
Many people view drug abuse and addiction as strictly a
social problem. Parents, teens, older adults, and other
members of the community tend to characterize people who take
drugs as morally weak or as having criminal tendencies. They
believe that drug abusers and addicts should be able to stop
taking drugs if they are willing to change their behavior.
These myths have not only stereotyped those with
drug-related problems, but also their families, their
communities, and the health care professionals who work with
them. Drug abuse and addiction comprise a public health
problem that affects many people and has wide-ranging social
consequences. It is NIDA's goal to help the public replace its
myths and long-held mistaken beliefs about drug abuse and
addiction with scientific evidence that addiction is a
chronic, relapsing, and treatable disease.
Addiction
does begin with drug abuse when an individual makes a
conscious choice to use drugs, but addiction is not just "a
lot of drug use." Recent scientific research provides
overwhelming evidence that not only do drugs interfere with
normal brain functioning creating powerful feelings of
pleasure, but they also have long-term effects on brain
metabolism and activity. At some point, changes occur in the
brain that can turn drug abuse into addiction, a chronic,
relapsing illness. Those addicted to drugs suffer from a
compulsive drug craving and usage and cannot quit by
themselves. Treatment is necessary to end this compulsive
behavior.
A variety of approaches are used in
treatment programs to help patients deal with these cravings
and possibly avoid drug relapse. NIDA research shows that
addiction is clearly treatable. Through treatment that is
tailored to individual needs, patients can learn to control
their condition and live relatively normal lives.
Treatment can have a profound effect not only on drug
abusers, but on society as a whole by significantly improving
social and psychological functioning, decreasing related
criminality and violence, and reducing the spread of AIDS. It
can also dramatically reduce the costs to society of drug
abuse.
Understanding drug abuse also helps in
understanding how to prevent use in the first place. Results
from NIDA-funded prevention research have shown that
comprehensive prevention programs that involve the family,
schools, communities, and the media are effective in reducing
drug abuse. It is necessary to keep sending the message that
it is better to not start at all than to enter rehabilitation
if addiction occurs.
A tremendous opportunity exists
to effectively change the ways in which the public understands
drug abuse and addiction because of the wealth of scientific
data NIDA has amassed. Overcoming misconceptions and replacing
ideology with scientific knowledge is the best hope for
bridging the "great disconnect" - the gap between the public
perception of drug abuse and addiction and the scientific
facts.
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