Archive for the ‘Addiction’ Category

Addiction is an Illness

Tuesday, February 2nd, 2010

Addiction is considered a disease, and you cure a disease. But the scientific substantiation of this idea is highly questionable. And the effectiveness of drug services is not established. The addiction can better dispense with the concept of disease and to promote policies that deal with the problem.

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The British author and psychiatrist Theodore Dalrymple in his book Drugs. The myths and lies (2006) that it is nonsense to think that addiction is a disease. Addiction is for him a matter of bad morals.


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Compulsive shoppers, an addiction differently

Sunday, January 24th, 2010

addiction

Within the world of addiction, there are many that are not very common, but are of this character, and compulsive buying is by definition the uncontrollable desire to acquire any property, regardless of income or need, generating a cost that may exceed individual budget, making it almost unconsciously and with the subsequent repentance.

The reasons people take such action unconsciously, may have different causes, being the most definite psychological, such as personal dissatisfaction and frustration, looking through an outlet shopping with these psychological barriers.

Another factor leading to the purchase of influence is the effect of subliminal advertising, which hardly can be considered a science today, to bring life to instill a model to follow or brave new world, to which we all have access, only if buy a certain product, to being outside this world, but we do. (more…)

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The concept of addiction

Saturday, January 9th, 2010

The concept of addiction One might think that the concept of addiction is as old as time. Not so: the idea is relatively recent – and those who have defended always were driven by political or moral. The modern version of the concept was invented in the eighteenth by the physician Benjamin Rush, with his friends in the anti-alcohol, he had the addiction as the cause of (and argument against) the dangers of demon alcohol. Alcoholic beverages were then accused of causing a “disease control”.

Later, the theory of “degeneration” would make its way into the medical field, it was thought that mental disorders could be hereditary; this heredity condemning its victims to the mental and social failure. In the nineteenth in the Colonies, alcohol was rampant among the natives, deemed “inferior” the psychiatrists concluded that the two states – Alcoholism and degeneration – went together. The addiction as such was less attributable to the harmfulness of drugs, it is then attributed to the physiological weakness of the victims. He was complaining addicts, not condemn them.

The “degeneration” and eugenics eventually disappear in the 1950s – a death-deserved and well overdue. One idea, however, survived these concepts: the claim that addiction is caused by vulnerability to be a susceptibility which existed even before the person came into contact with drugs. This line of thought seems to have peaked in 2004: a report from the World Health said while substance dependence was “a mental disorder, as well as the neurological or psychiatric illness.

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Ending the addiction

Thursday, January 7th, 2010

Ending the addiction

Do we really need rehab centers for people who spend too much time online or in stores?

Like smoking crack pulling desperately on their pipes broken, we are, lately, all become drug addicts in need. Our drugs? Addiction. The concept is certainly not new: it already has hundreds of years. He then described the compulsive consumption of alcohol, and later those of heroin and cocaine.

Today, we put all the sauce: it seems to apply to each behavior deemed unpleasant or unreasonable. Take the inordinate passion for new technologies. This summer, countless articles and reports have praised the RESTART clinic in Washington state, which seems to be the first rehabilitation center treating the “Internet addiction”. For $ 15,000, you can register for a stay of 45 nights supposed to cure you of any dangerous or unhealthy fascination for, say, the role-playing game World of Warcraft online. The Internet addiction is only one of the behavioral addictions that have recently made their debut in the pages and screens of mainstream media: see also addiction to shopping, sex addiction, food addiction, addiction to the love, etc.. (more…)

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