Drug & substance abuse Marijuana, Cocaine, Heroine, alcohol and prescription...OrnellaRN
Risk Factors, Effects on the brain,Symptoms, Warning signs and treatment.
Drugs and substances such as marijuana, cocaine and heroine are not the only substances that can be abused. Alcohol, prescription drugs and over-the-counter medications, inhalant and solvents, sedatives, coffee and cigarettes.
drug abuse- what is it? most common stimulants, cocaine abuse, aderall abuse, meth abuse, physiology of drug abuse, physical signs of drug abuse, treatment
Drug & substance abuse Marijuana, Cocaine, Heroine, alcohol and prescription...OrnellaRN
Risk Factors, Effects on the brain,Symptoms, Warning signs and treatment.
Drugs and substances such as marijuana, cocaine and heroine are not the only substances that can be abused. Alcohol, prescription drugs and over-the-counter medications, inhalant and solvents, sedatives, coffee and cigarettes.
drug abuse- what is it? most common stimulants, cocaine abuse, aderall abuse, meth abuse, physiology of drug abuse, physical signs of drug abuse, treatment
This PPT is based on Drug Addiction & Abuse..Anyone who is interested to download this ppt ,can comment on the comment section with their email id. I can assure you that I will send this original ppt to your email.
Drugs –What they Are and What they Do ?
CONSUMPTION OF VARIOUS DRUGS
Two main Categories of Drugs
Why do so many Teenagers start down this potentially Dangerous path ?
- Why do people start?
Causes
TREATMENT
Think again
Drug awareness Slides for Houghton House addiction rehabilitation DyWilliams1
Overview of drug ups downs and issues The trafficking of illicit drugs and hallucinogens is the largest illegal business in the world accounting for about 8% of international trade, amounting to about $400 billion annually. Drugs corrode a whole society. Robbery and violence connected with drug abuse have become a mundane affair and most commonly drug consumers often appeal to felony or prostitution to satisfy their vice. https://www.houghtonhouse.co.za
A drug is something that affects your body. Drugs must to pass through the body and into the brain.
In pharmacology, a pharmaceutical drugcalled a medication or medicine
It is a chemical substance used to treat, cure, prevent, ordiagnose a disease
This is a drugs presentation for year 8 students who are learning about drugs and their effects of humans, this is being used as part of a PSHE course.
Drug addiction is basically a brain disease that changes the functioning of brain. There is an uncontrollable desire to consume drugs, as a result of which addicted people engage in compulsive behavior to take drugs.
Background: The Gateway Drug Theory suggests that licit drugs, such as tobacco and alcohol, serve as a "gateway" toward the use of other, illicit drugs. However, there remains some discrepancy regarding which drug-alcohol, tobacco, or even marijuana-serves as the initial "gateway" drug subsequently leading to the use of illicit drugs such as cocaine and heroin. The purpose of this investigation was to determine which drug (alcohol, tobacco, or marijuana) was the actual "gateway" drug leading to additional substance use among a nationally representative sample of high school seniors.
Methods: This investigation conducted a secondary analysis of the 2008 Monitoring the Future 12th-grade data. Initiation into alcohol, tobacco, and other drug use was analyzed using a Guttman scale. Coefficients of reliability and scalability were calculated to evaluate scale fit. Subsequent cross tabulations and chi-square test for independence were conducted to better understand the relationship between the identified gateway drug and other substances' use.
Results: Results from the Guttman scale indicated that alcohol represented the "gateway" drug, leading to the use of tobacco, marijuana, and other illicit substances. Moreover, students who used alcohol exhibited a significantly greater likelihood of using both licit and illicit drugs.
Conclusion: The findings from this investigation support that alcohol should receive primary attention in school-based substance abuse prevention programming, as the use of other substances could be impacted by delaying or preventing alcohol use. Therefore, it seems prudent for school and public health officials to focus prevention efforts, policies, and monies, on addressing adolescent alcohol use.
Background: The Gateway Drug Theory suggests that licit drugs, such as tobacco and alcohol, serve as a "gateway" toward the use of other, illicit drugs. However, there remains some discrepancy regarding which drug-alcohol, tobacco, or even marijuana-serves as the initial "gateway" drug subsequently leading to the use of illicit drugs such as cocaine and heroin. The purpose of this investigation was to determine which drug (alcohol, tobacco, or marijuana) was the actual "gateway" drug leading to additional substance use among a nationally representative sample of high school seniors.
Methods: This investigation conducted a secondary analysis of the 2008 Monitoring the Future 12th-grade data. Initiation into alcohol, tobacco, and other drug use was analyzed using a Guttman scale. Coefficients of reliability and scalability were calculated to evaluate scale fit. Subsequent cross tabulations and chi-square test for independence were conducted to better understand the relationship between the identified gateway drug and other substances' use.
Results: Results from the Guttman scale indicated that alcohol represented the "gateway" drug, leading to the use of tobacco, marijuana, and other illicit substances. Moreover, students who used alcohol exhibited a significantly greater likelihood of using both licit and illicit drugs.
Conclusion: The findings from this investigation support that alcohol should receive primary attention in school-based substance abuse prevention programming, as the use of other substances could be impacted by delaying or preventing alcohol use. Therefore, it seems prudent for school and public health officials to focus prevention efforts, policies, and monies, on addressing adolescent alcohol use.
Background: Given ever-reducing budgets of community and school substance use prevention programs, there is a call for identifying the first substance in the sequence leading to polydrug use.
Methods: Examining data from a nationally representative sample of 2835 United States 12th graders, we sought to determine (1) the first substance adolescents use; (2) order in which adolescents progress through alcohol, tobacco, and marijuana use; and (3) impact of age of initial substance use on lifetime and frequency of illicit substance use.
Results: Alcohol is the most commonly used substance, and the majority of polysubstance using respondents consumed alcohol prior to tobacco or marijuana initiation. Respondents initiating alcohol use in sixth grade reported significantly greater lifetime illicit substance use (M = 1.9, standard deviation [SD] = 1.7, p < .001) and more frequent illicit substance use (M = 6.0, SD = 6.5, p < .001) than those initiating alcohol use in ninth grade or later. Overall, effect sizes for these differences were large (eta squared = 0.30 and 0.28, respectively).
Conclusions: Findings underscore the importance of screening for substance use, even among youth enrolled in elementary/middle school. In addition, schoo
This PPT is based on Drug Addiction & Abuse..Anyone who is interested to download this ppt ,can comment on the comment section with their email id. I can assure you that I will send this original ppt to your email.
Drugs –What they Are and What they Do ?
CONSUMPTION OF VARIOUS DRUGS
Two main Categories of Drugs
Why do so many Teenagers start down this potentially Dangerous path ?
- Why do people start?
Causes
TREATMENT
Think again
Drug awareness Slides for Houghton House addiction rehabilitation DyWilliams1
Overview of drug ups downs and issues The trafficking of illicit drugs and hallucinogens is the largest illegal business in the world accounting for about 8% of international trade, amounting to about $400 billion annually. Drugs corrode a whole society. Robbery and violence connected with drug abuse have become a mundane affair and most commonly drug consumers often appeal to felony or prostitution to satisfy their vice. https://www.houghtonhouse.co.za
A drug is something that affects your body. Drugs must to pass through the body and into the brain.
In pharmacology, a pharmaceutical drugcalled a medication or medicine
It is a chemical substance used to treat, cure, prevent, ordiagnose a disease
This is a drugs presentation for year 8 students who are learning about drugs and their effects of humans, this is being used as part of a PSHE course.
Drug addiction is basically a brain disease that changes the functioning of brain. There is an uncontrollable desire to consume drugs, as a result of which addicted people engage in compulsive behavior to take drugs.
Background: The Gateway Drug Theory suggests that licit drugs, such as tobacco and alcohol, serve as a "gateway" toward the use of other, illicit drugs. However, there remains some discrepancy regarding which drug-alcohol, tobacco, or even marijuana-serves as the initial "gateway" drug subsequently leading to the use of illicit drugs such as cocaine and heroin. The purpose of this investigation was to determine which drug (alcohol, tobacco, or marijuana) was the actual "gateway" drug leading to additional substance use among a nationally representative sample of high school seniors.
Methods: This investigation conducted a secondary analysis of the 2008 Monitoring the Future 12th-grade data. Initiation into alcohol, tobacco, and other drug use was analyzed using a Guttman scale. Coefficients of reliability and scalability were calculated to evaluate scale fit. Subsequent cross tabulations and chi-square test for independence were conducted to better understand the relationship between the identified gateway drug and other substances' use.
Results: Results from the Guttman scale indicated that alcohol represented the "gateway" drug, leading to the use of tobacco, marijuana, and other illicit substances. Moreover, students who used alcohol exhibited a significantly greater likelihood of using both licit and illicit drugs.
Conclusion: The findings from this investigation support that alcohol should receive primary attention in school-based substance abuse prevention programming, as the use of other substances could be impacted by delaying or preventing alcohol use. Therefore, it seems prudent for school and public health officials to focus prevention efforts, policies, and monies, on addressing adolescent alcohol use.
Background: The Gateway Drug Theory suggests that licit drugs, such as tobacco and alcohol, serve as a "gateway" toward the use of other, illicit drugs. However, there remains some discrepancy regarding which drug-alcohol, tobacco, or even marijuana-serves as the initial "gateway" drug subsequently leading to the use of illicit drugs such as cocaine and heroin. The purpose of this investigation was to determine which drug (alcohol, tobacco, or marijuana) was the actual "gateway" drug leading to additional substance use among a nationally representative sample of high school seniors.
Methods: This investigation conducted a secondary analysis of the 2008 Monitoring the Future 12th-grade data. Initiation into alcohol, tobacco, and other drug use was analyzed using a Guttman scale. Coefficients of reliability and scalability were calculated to evaluate scale fit. Subsequent cross tabulations and chi-square test for independence were conducted to better understand the relationship between the identified gateway drug and other substances' use.
Results: Results from the Guttman scale indicated that alcohol represented the "gateway" drug, leading to the use of tobacco, marijuana, and other illicit substances. Moreover, students who used alcohol exhibited a significantly greater likelihood of using both licit and illicit drugs.
Conclusion: The findings from this investigation support that alcohol should receive primary attention in school-based substance abuse prevention programming, as the use of other substances could be impacted by delaying or preventing alcohol use. Therefore, it seems prudent for school and public health officials to focus prevention efforts, policies, and monies, on addressing adolescent alcohol use.
Background: Given ever-reducing budgets of community and school substance use prevention programs, there is a call for identifying the first substance in the sequence leading to polydrug use.
Methods: Examining data from a nationally representative sample of 2835 United States 12th graders, we sought to determine (1) the first substance adolescents use; (2) order in which adolescents progress through alcohol, tobacco, and marijuana use; and (3) impact of age of initial substance use on lifetime and frequency of illicit substance use.
Results: Alcohol is the most commonly used substance, and the majority of polysubstance using respondents consumed alcohol prior to tobacco or marijuana initiation. Respondents initiating alcohol use in sixth grade reported significantly greater lifetime illicit substance use (M = 1.9, standard deviation [SD] = 1.7, p < .001) and more frequent illicit substance use (M = 6.0, SD = 6.5, p < .001) than those initiating alcohol use in ninth grade or later. Overall, effect sizes for these differences were large (eta squared = 0.30 and 0.28, respectively).
Conclusions: Findings underscore the importance of screening for substance use, even among youth enrolled in elementary/middle school. In addition, schoo
daily drug addiction is increasing at a higher rate.. and simply we all need to stop this if we want ourselves to live longer and healthier and also if we want any other relative of our who is addicted towards this..we need to stop this...and we need to create awareness against taking drugs...drugs in medicines are ok because they are used in it in a proper amount but drugs directly...HELL! IT CAN SNATCH YOUR LIFE JUST AWAY FROM YOUR BODY !
India Clinical Trials Market: Industry Size and Growth Trends [2030] Analyzed...Kumar Satyam
According to TechSci Research report, "India Clinical Trials Market- By Region, Competition, Forecast & Opportunities, 2030F," the India Clinical Trials Market was valued at USD 2.05 billion in 2024 and is projected to grow at a compound annual growth rate (CAGR) of 8.64% through 2030. The market is driven by a variety of factors, making India an attractive destination for pharmaceutical companies and researchers. India's vast and diverse patient population, cost-effective operational environment, and a large pool of skilled medical professionals contribute significantly to the market's growth. Additionally, increasing government support in streamlining regulations and the growing prevalence of lifestyle diseases further propel the clinical trials market.
Growing Prevalence of Lifestyle Diseases
The rising incidence of lifestyle diseases such as diabetes, cardiovascular diseases, and cancer is a major trend driving the clinical trials market in India. These conditions necessitate the development and testing of new treatment methods, creating a robust demand for clinical trials. The increasing burden of these diseases highlights the need for innovative therapies and underscores the importance of India as a key player in global clinical research.
Navigating the Health Insurance Market_ Understanding Trends and Options.pdfEnterprise Wired
From navigating policy options to staying informed about industry trends, this comprehensive guide explores everything you need to know about the health insurance market.
Telehealth Psychology Building Trust with Clients.pptxThe Harvest Clinic
Telehealth psychology is a digital approach that offers psychological services and mental health care to clients remotely, using technologies like video conferencing, phone calls, text messaging, and mobile apps for communication.
Welcome to Secret Tantric, London’s finest VIP Massage agency. Since we first opened our doors, we have provided the ultimate erotic massage experience to innumerable clients, each one searching for the very best sensual massage in London. We come by this reputation honestly with a dynamic team of the city’s most beautiful masseuses.
CRISPR-Cas9, a revolutionary gene-editing tool, holds immense potential to reshape medicine, agriculture, and our understanding of life. But like any powerful tool, it comes with ethical considerations.
Unveiling CRISPR: This naturally occurring bacterial defense system (crRNA & Cas9 protein) fights viruses. Scientists repurposed it for precise gene editing (correction, deletion, insertion) by targeting specific DNA sequences.
The Promise: CRISPR offers exciting possibilities:
Gene Therapy: Correcting genetic diseases like cystic fibrosis.
Agriculture: Engineering crops resistant to pests and harsh environments.
Research: Studying gene function to unlock new knowledge.
The Peril: Ethical concerns demand attention:
Off-target Effects: Unintended DNA edits can have unforeseen consequences.
Eugenics: Misusing CRISPR for designer babies raises social and ethical questions.
Equity: High costs could limit access to this potentially life-saving technology.
The Path Forward: Responsible development is crucial:
International Collaboration: Clear guidelines are needed for research and human trials.
Public Education: Open discussions ensure informed decisions about CRISPR.
Prioritize Safety and Ethics: Safety and ethical principles must be paramount.
CRISPR offers a powerful tool for a better future, but responsible development and addressing ethical concerns are essential. By prioritizing safety, fostering open dialogue, and ensuring equitable access, we can harness CRISPR's power for the benefit of all. (2998 characters)
R3 Stem Cells and Kidney Repair A New Horizon in Nephrology.pptxR3 Stem Cell
R3 Stem Cells and Kidney Repair: A New Horizon in Nephrology" explores groundbreaking advancements in the use of R3 stem cells for kidney disease treatment. This insightful piece delves into the potential of these cells to regenerate damaged kidney tissue, offering new hope for patients and reshaping the future of nephrology.
Navigating Challenges: Mental Health, Legislation, and the Prison System in B...Guillermo Rivera
This conference will delve into the intricate intersections between mental health, legal frameworks, and the prison system in Bolivia. It aims to provide a comprehensive overview of the current challenges faced by mental health professionals working within the legislative and correctional landscapes. Topics of discussion will include the prevalence and impact of mental health issues among the incarcerated population, the effectiveness of existing mental health policies and legislation, and potential reforms to enhance the mental health support system within prisons.
QA Paediatric dentistry department, Hospital Melaka 2020Azreen Aj
QA study - To improve the 6th monthly recall rate post-comprehensive dental treatment under general anaesthesia in paediatric dentistry department, Hospital Melaka
One of the most developed cities of India, the city of Chennai is the capital of Tamilnadu and many people from different parts of India come here to earn their bread and butter. Being a metropolitan, the city is filled with towering building and beaches but the sad part as with almost every Indian city
Defecation
Normal defecation begins with movement in the left colon, moving stool toward the anus. When stool reaches the rectum, the distention causes relaxation of the internal sphincter and an awareness of the need to defecate. At the time of defecation, the external sphincter relaxes, and abdominal muscles contract, increasing intrarectal pressure and forcing the stool out
The Valsalva maneuver exerts pressure to expel faeces through a voluntary contraction of the abdominal muscles while maintaining forced expiration against a closed airway. Patients with cardiovascular disease, glaucoma, increased intracranial pressure, or a new surgical wound are at greater risk for cardiac dysrhythmias and elevated blood pressure with the Valsalva maneuver and need to avoid straining to pass the stool.
Normal defecation is painless, resulting in passage of soft, formed stool
CONSTIPATION
Constipation is a symptom, not a disease. Improper diet, reduced fluid intake, lack of exercise, and certain medications can cause constipation. For example, patients receiving opiates for pain after surgery often require a stool softener or laxative to prevent constipation. The signs of constipation include infrequent bowel movements (less than every 3 days), difficulty passing stools, excessive straining, inability to defecate at will, and hard feaces
IMPACTION
Fecal impaction results from unrelieved constipation. It is a collection of hardened feces wedged in the rectum that a person cannot expel. In cases of severe impaction the mass extends up into the sigmoid colon.
DIARRHEA
Diarrhea is an increase in the number of stools and the passage of liquid, unformed feces. It is associated with disorders affecting digestion, absorption, and secretion in the GI tract. Intestinal contents pass through the small and large intestine too quickly to allow for the usual absorption of fluid and nutrients. Irritation within the colon results in increased mucus secretion. As a result, feces become watery, and the patient is unable to control the urge to defecate. Normally an anal bag is safe and effective in long-term treatment of patients with fecal incontinence at home, in hospice, or in the hospital. Fecal incontinence is expensive and a potentially dangerous condition in terms of contamination and risk of skin ulceration
HEMORRHOIDS
Hemorrhoids are dilated, engorged veins in the lining of the rectum. They are either external or internal.
FLATULENCE
As gas accumulates in the lumen of the intestines, the bowel wall stretches and distends (flatulence). It is a common cause of abdominal fullness, pain, and cramping. Normally intestinal gas escapes through the mouth (belching) or the anus (passing of flatus)
FECAL INCONTINENCE
Fecal incontinence is the inability to control passage of feces and gas from the anus. Incontinence harms a patient’s body image
PREPARATION AND GIVING OF LAXATIVESACCORDING TO POTTER AND PERRY,
An enema is the instillation of a solution into the rectum and sig
We understand the unique challenges pickleball players face and are committed to helping you stay healthy and active. In this presentation, we’ll explore the three most common pickleball injuries and provide strategies for prevention and treatment.
2. A DRUG IS ANY SUBSTANCE OTHER
THAN FOOD WHICH CHANGES THE
WAY THE BODY OR MIND FUNCTIONS.
3. Types of drugs
Stimulants (uppers) – Speed up the brain
and central nervous system.
Examples are caffeine (coffee, tea)
nicotine (cigarettes),
amphetamines, speed, cocaine and
diet pills.
4. Types of drugs
Depressants (downers) – Slow down the
brain and central nervous system.
Examples are alcohol, beer, wine,
vodka, gin etc heroin, tranquilizers,
sleeping pills.
5. Types of drugs
Hallucinogens – These drugs
alter the user’s state of
consciousness. (Distort auditory
and visual sensations) Examples are
LSD, ecstasy, magic mushrooms,
marijuana.
6. ALCOHOL
• Alcohol goes directly from your
digestive system into your blood and
within minutes spreads to entire body,
including brain
• It spreads evenly throughout body-
except brain which gets the highest
concentration because it gets more
blood than any other part of body
• More blood equals more alcohol
• Intoxication (drunkenness) starts in the
brain
8. Alcohol
Physical Effects
• Co-ordination is
impaired, clumsiness,
slower reflexes
• High blood pressure,
damage to the heart
• Liver damage
• If drinking when
pregnant, FASD
• Life threatening when
mixed with other
drugs
Mental and
Emotional
• Behave in ways that
you normally wouldn’t
• Increase in aggressive
and violent behaviour
• Problems with school
and learning
9. ALCOHOL and the LIVER
• The liver removes poisons – include alcohol
from the body
• People who drink regularly can have
serious liver damage and may even get
liver cancer
• If the liver is damaged badly enough, it
can stop working, causing the person to
die.
10. ALCOHOL
• Alcohol is the oldest and most
widely used drug in the world.
• Leading cause of death for teens
and young adults in the country
is motor vehicle accidents-many
of which involve alcohol use.
11. NICOTINE
• Most addictive drug
• Causes more long term health problems
than any other drug
• Adults are smoking less, younger people
under 18 smoke more
• When someone stops smoking they have:
strong cravings
irritability (everything gets on
nerves)
thoughts of it-can’t stop thinking
about it
12. NICOTINE
What it does to your body,
brain and behavior
• depression
• lung cancer
• lung diseases
• heart disease
• skin becomes thinner and wrinkled
17. MARIJUANA
• Marijuana is the most common illegal drug
around
• Comes from a plant called “cannabis”
• Some people call it pot, weed, grass, hash,
smoke or ganja
• Cannabis has the chemical
“tetrahydrocannabinol” or THC
• When you smoke a joint the THC goes into
the lungs, then into the heart which pumps
into the bloodstream which takes it
directly to brain
18. MARIJUANA
• Only takes few minutes for THC to get to
brain when you smoke marijuana
• Eating takes longer to get to brain-passes
through digestive system first
• In brain, activates “receptors” gives you
the feeling of being high
• Marijuana changes physical and chemical
balance in your brain
19. MARIJUANA
• Short Term Effects:
Increase in heart rate,
lead to anxiety and
paranoia
Distorted concept of
time and space
Decrease in
concentration skills,
short-term memory
capacity
Feeling tired after the
“high” wears off
Increase in appetite,
weight gain
• Long Term Effects:
• Breathing problems
• Lung cancer
• Damage cells and
tissues in the body
that fight disease
• Lack of motivation
• Difficulty processing
new information
20.
21. MARIJUANA
• Marijuana and cigarette smoke have some
of the same cancer-causing substances.
• Benzopyrene (cancer-producing agent)
higher in marijuana
• 400 chemicals in marijuana smoke affect
lungs, throat and esophagus
22. • Certain drugs have become popular among teens and
young adults at dance clubs and raves.
23. • Ecstasy is a slang term for an illegal drug
MDMA
• MDMA is synthetic-doesn’t come from a
plant but made in secret labs
• Other chemicals or substances are added
to it such as caffeine, amphetamines,
dextromethorphan (in some cough syrups),
or cocaine.
24. • Mind-altering drug
• Hallucinogen-acts on the mind to cause people to see or feel
things that aren’t really there
• Hallucinogens mix up pictures in the mind and throw people
into scary or sad experiences in the past
• Ecstasy is called “love pill” increases perception of color, sound
and sensations
25. • “Hit” of ecstasy lasts 3-6 hrs
• Once swallowed takes 15 min to enter
bloodstream and reach brain
• 45 min later user reaches peak level high
• It’s downhill from there unless user takes
more
26. Effects
• Feeling of sadness
• Anxiety, Depression
• Memory Difficulties
• Paranoia
• Nervousness
• Insomnia
• Drug cravings
• Increased touch of sense
• Suppresses need to eat or sleep
• Moist skin or dry mouth
27. ROHYPNOL
• Rohypnol can affect your brain and body
• Damages neurons in your brain, impairing
your senses, memory, judgment, and
coordination
• Artificial drug-created in a chem lab during
medical research
28. ROHYPNOL
• Makes user very relaxed, confused, “spaced-out”
• Takes away all inhibitions, making people do things they
normally wouldn’t
29. ROHYPNOL
• Can make user pass out or slip into coma if taken in large dose or
mixed with other drugs
• Affects your self-control - is used in “date rape” and other assaults can
make you unconscious and immobilizes you
• Causes a kind of amnesia-user doesn’t remember what they said or
did while on the drug
• Comes in a form of a pill, or sometimes powder mixed with a drink, or
put into someone’s drink
30. Ketamine
• Loss of consciousness
• Prevents user from feeling pain
• Leads to suffocation – by
breathing vomit into lungs
• Reduces level of oxygen in the
brain, heart and muscles which
can lead to death
31. HEROIN
• Processed from morphine – obtained from
opium poppy
• “downer” affects brain’s pleasure systems
– interferes with brains ability to feel
pain
32. HEROIN
• white to dark brown powder or tar-like
substance
• is cut with other drugs or substances
(sugar, starch, powdered milk)
• abusers don’t know actual strength of
drug or true contents = high chance of
overdose or death
• sharing needles and equipment cause other
diseases and problems for users
33. HEROIN
• leads to flushing of skin, dry mouth,
collapsed veins, liver disease
• additives don’t dissolve leading to
clogs in blood vessels that lead to
lungs, liver, kidney or brain
• tolerance develops with regular use –
user needs more heroin to achieve
same intensity
34.
35. Cocaine + CRACK
• Cocaine is a stimulant drug-more
alert and energetic
• Cocaine is a white powder comes
from the leaves of coca plant
• Can be one of the hardest drugs to
quit
36. Cocaine + CRACK
• Cocaine makes people feel
energetic, talkative, alert and
euphoric
• More aware of senses (increases
sound, touch, sight and
sexuality)
37. Cocaine + CRACK
• Reduces hunger and need to
sleep
• Increase in self-control and
confidence
• High doses cause panic attacks,
psychotic episodes (paranoia),
violent behavior
38. Cocaine + CRACK
• Blood vessels thicken and
constrict, reduce flow of oxygen
to heart
• Heart muscles work harder can
lead to heart attack or stroke
• Raises blood pressure, can
explode weakened blood vessels
in brain
39. Cocaine + CRACK
• Small amount can lead to
overdose
• Overdose can cause seizure
or heart failure
• Snorting cocaine can cause
sinus infection and loss of
smell
40. Cocaine + CRACK
• Damage tissues in nose, cause hole in nose
• Damage lungs-severe chest pains,
breathing problems, high temperatures
• Cocaine increases the same chemicals in
the brain that make people feel good when
they eat, drink or have sex
41. CRYSTAL METH
• Man-made drug
• Easy to produce (15 chemicals
used)
• Main ingredient pseudo
ephedrine ( cold remedy), is
cooked with chemicals found at
hardware store-red
phosphorous, iodine, ammonia,
paint thinner, ether, Drano,
lithium from batteries
42. CRYSTAL METH
• Investment of $150 can yield
up to $10,000 worth of the
drug
• Each kg of meth produced 5-
7kg of chemical waste
dumped down the drain or
dumped in backyard
43. CRYSTAL METH
• By-product is toxic gas which
causes fires or explosions
• Drug was used during Second
World War to keep pilots
awake on long missions
44. CRYSTAL METH
• Methamphetamine releases high
levels of dopamine in the brain a
neurotransmitter that is
associated with pleasurable or
rewarding experiences
• After it is taken user feels
increased wakefulness and
physical activity and decreased
appetite
45. CRYSTAL METH
• Higher doses cause
irritability, insomnia,
confusion, hallucinations,
anxiety, paranoia and
increased aggression
• Even higher doses can cause
hypothermia, convulsions and
lead to death
46. CRYSTAL METH
• When body is stimulated by
meth it causes irreversible
damage
• Increased heart rate and
blood pressure damage blood
vessels in the brain, causing
strokes, irregular heart beat
causing a collapse or death
47. Sex risks
Substance abuse is correlated with
risky sex…
In one study a woman coming off of
meth reported 100 different sexual
encounters with 60 different
partners in the past month.
Risky sex is correlated with many
diseases
50. Substance abuse and society
What are the effects of substance abuse on
society?
• Spread of diseases such as HIV/AIDS and
Hepatitis C through sharing needles, or
having unprotected sex
51. Substance abuse and society
Effects on unborn children or other
complications from drug use
52. EFFECTS OF DRUG USE
ON CHILD
• Miscarriages
• Premature birth
• Low birth weight
• Birth defects
• Developmental problems
• A baby’s health problems, if caused by a
drug will continue to grow as the child
grows.
53. Substance abuse and society
CRIME
• drug possession
• drug use
• drug trafficking
• drug manufacturing
• theft
• break and enter
• robbery
• motor vehicle theft