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A major national goal is to improve our health and advance our
opportunities to pursue happiness. Simulta neously, there are
increasing health care costs and increasing demands to accomplish
more with less financial support. Treatment costs can be reduced
and health improved by preventing the toxic effects of drugs. This
first volume of our new series, Drug and Alcohol to reduce the use
and Abuse Reviews, focuses on stategies abuse of common compounds
known to cause major damage to health: alcohol, tobacco, and
illicit drugs such as cocaine and heroin. With the number of deaths
attributable to the consumption of alcohol in the US at about
100,000 per year, the annual cost of addictions will be $150
billion by 1995. A variety of approaches to preventing drug abuse
are being applied by governmental agencies and health care
providers to reduce costs. These include school-based inter
ventions, driver education programs, media interventions, health
warning labels, physician guidance, economic dis incentives,
restricted availability, punishments and penalties, environmental
protections, and social-support approaches. With such a range of
options, it becomes critical to evaluate and choose the most
effective systems for a given population. We feel that the present
collection of critical survey articles constitutes a thorough
examination of the issues and strategies associated with
prevention, and trust that readers will find the book exceedingly
helpful in under standing and planning what needs to be done."
Alcohol and other drugs of abuse are major contributing factors to
liver disease and its pathology. Alcoholic cirrhosis causes
thousands of deaths each year in the United States, and encourages
liver replacement. A better understanding of the mechanisms of
liver pathology will significantly aid basic researchers and
physicians in treating and preventing liver damage. This book is
designed especially for those researchers wishing to understand
alcoholic liver disease. Therefore the role of alcohol in changing
nutrition and its nutritional effects on liver disease are
reviewed. The generation of free radicals during alcohol use has
been found to be an important cause of membrane changes, of cancer
development, and of lipid alterations-and thus of liver pathology.
In addition to alcohol, other drugs of abuse, including morphine,
cocaine, marijuana, and caffeine have also been shown to be
significant contributors to liver pathology. The prevalence of drug
and alcohol use and abuse today means that liver disease will
continue as a major social and medical problem. The explanation of
its biological origins cannot fail to help us better understand and
treat the disease in the years to come.
Alcohol and other drugs of abuse cause significant physi ological
changes, especially during development. The effects on the infant
and child range from severe mental retardation to mild changes in
activity and neurological functions. Although the level of intake
needed to cause fetal damage is not clear, the magnitude of the
problem is significant, with many long-term sequelae. As a result,
it becomes critical to better diagnose and manage drug and alcohol
use during pregnancy. This must involve special training for health
care professionals. In addi tion, recognition of the psychosocial
factors affecting alcohol use, especially by youth and young
adults, is critical to modi fying behavior, and thus reducing fetal
alcohol exposure. Cultural considerations can also come into play
in modi fying alcohol and drug use by women so as to reduce fetal
damage. The trends in alcohol and drug use by youth forecast rising
levels of damage to infants. These children will need extensive
medical and educational care for years to decades. Clearly,
understanding of the role women must take in modifying their
alcohol and drug use during pregnancy will facilitate changes in
our cultural and educational practices that will help reduce fetal
trauma from alcohol.
Alcohol and other drugs of abuse are major contributing factors to
liver disease and its pathology. Alcoholic cirrhosis causes
thousands of deaths each year in the United States, and encourages
liver replacement. A better understanding of the mechanisms of
liver pathology will significantly aid basic researchers and
physicians in treating and preventing liver damage. This book is
designed especially for those researchers wishing to understand
alcoholic liver disease. Therefore the role of alcohol in changing
nutrition and its nutritional effects on liver disease are
reviewed. The generation of free radicals during alcohol use has
been found to be an important cause of membrane changes, of cancer
development, and of lipid alterations-and thus of liver pathology.
In addition to alcohol, other drugs of abuse, including morphine,
cocaine, marijuana, and caffeine have also been shown to be
significant contributors to liver pathology. The prevalence of drug
and alcohol use and abuse today means that liver disease will
continue as a major social and medical problem. The explanation of
its biological origins cannot fail to help us better understand and
treat the disease in the years to come.
A major national goal is to improve the health of the populace
while advancing our opportunities to pursue happiness. Simulta
neously, there are both increasing health costs and increasing
demands that more be accomplished with less financial support. With
the number of deaths attributable to drug abuse, especially of
tobacco, in the US at about 250,000 per year, the annual cost of
drug addiction is over $150 billion. Improved treatment methods can
both reduce these costs and improve health by preventing the
continued exposure of abusers to the toxic effects of alcohol and
other drugs. This fourth volume of Drug and Alcohol Abuse Reviews
focuses on the strategies currently thought best for the treatment
of drugs of abuse. A variety of approaches to drug abuse treatment
employ those psychosocial factors that are known to influence drug
use in youth and adults. Although the main emphasis is on the
treatment of illicit drug use, a major cofactor in damaging the
health of drug users is nicotine (tobacco) addiction, whose
treatment is also reviewed. And the roles of learning and
outpatient services are shown to affect treatment significantly.
Thus, the problems confronted and solutions used in drug abuse
treatment have here been analyzed in concise reviews that deal with
the evidence for today' s best hypotheses and conclusions. Some
emphasis is also placed on reviewing new compounds used to prevent
cocaine and opioid dependence."
A major national goal is to improve our health and advance our
opportunities to pursue happiness. Simulta neously, there are
increasing health care costs and increasing demands to accomplish
more with less financial support. Treatment costs can be reduced
and health improved by preventing the toxic effects of drugs. This
first volume of our new series, Drug and Alcohol to reduce the use
and Abuse Reviews, focuses on stategies abuse of common compounds
known to cause major damage to health: alcohol, tobacco, and
illicit drugs such as cocaine and heroin. With the number of deaths
attributable to the consumption of alcohol in the US at about
100,000 per year, the annual cost of addictions will be $150
billion by 1995. A variety of approaches to preventing drug abuse
are being applied by governmental agencies and health care
providers to reduce costs. These include school-based inter
ventions, driver education programs, media interventions, health
warning labels, physician guidance, economic dis incentives,
restricted availability, punishments and penalties, environmental
protections, and social-support approaches. With such a range of
options, it becomes critical to evaluate and choose the most
effective systems for a given population. We feel that the present
collection of critical survey articles constitutes a thorough
examination of the issues and strategies associated with
prevention, and trust that readers will find the book exceedingly
helpful in under standing and planning what needs to be done."
Alcohol and other drugs of abuse cause significant physi ological
changes, especially during development. The effects on the infant
and child range from severe mental retardation to mild changes in
activity and neurological functions. Although the level of intake
needed to cause fetal damage is not clear, the magnitude of the
problem is significant, with many long-term sequelae. As a result,
it becomes critical to better diagnose and manage drug and alcohol
use during pregnancy. This must involve special training for health
care professionals. In addi tion, recognition of the psychosocial
factors affecting alcohol use, especially by youth and young
adults, is critical to modi fying behavior, and thus reducing fetal
alcohol exposure. Cultural considerations can also come into play
in modi fying alcohol and drug use by women so as to reduce fetal
damage. The trends in alcohol and drug use by youth forecast rising
levels of damage to infants. These children will need extensive
medical and educational care for years to decades. Clearly,
understanding of the role women must take in modifying their
alcohol and drug use during pregnancy will facilitate changes in
our cultural and educational practices that will help reduce fetal
trauma from alcohol."
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