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Friday, May 11, 2007
Alcohol
Brief Description :
Alcohol is produced by fermentation (the action of yeast on liquids containing sugars and starches.) Pure alcohol has no colour nor taste. Alcoholic drinks vary in colour and taste because of other ingredients that are added to them.

Effects :
After a few drinks : Feel more relaxed, reduced concentration and slower reflexes

A few more drinks : Fewer inhibitions, more confidence, reduced coordination, slurred speech, intense moods

Still more drinks : Confusion, blurred vision, poor muscle control

More still : Nausea, vomiting, sleep

Even more : Possibly coma or death
Statistics and Trends :

Most drinkers (39.5 per cent) consumed alcohol on a weekly basis.

Males (46 per cent) were more likely than females (33 per cent) to drink weekly.

Nearly one in three teenagers were weekly drinkers, and almost half consumed alcohol less than weekly. Fewer than one in 100 teenagers consumed alcohol daily.

The average initiation age for drinking alcohol was 17.1 years




Alcohol addiction

When does casual consumption of alcohol turn to dependency drinking and finally to biochemically-controlled drinking?
The answer is, even most alcohol addicts themselves don't know when they became addicted to alcohol. Alcohol is the most sinister of drugs, one that draws a thin, usually imperceptible line between social use and addictive use. Alcoholic addicts rely on alcohol as a key component of their personality - without a drink, they simply cannot "be themselves."


Narconon helps people end their alcohol abuse and alcohol addiction through mind/body alcohol abuse treatment programs. Our alcohol treatment programs and alcohol abuse rehabilitation strategies give our clients all the tools they need to handle an addiction that's restricting their lives and preventing them from reaching their full potential. Most alcohol rehabilitation programs have a 15-20% success rate. The Narconon alcohol treatment program has a 70% success rate, meaning most of its graduates are still substance-free two years out of its recovery program.
Our alcohol abuse treatment programs are not only focused on withdrawal from all forms of drinking, but also, through a holistic healing process, on helping others escape all forms of substitute addictions. This process frees the body from the alcohol toxins that build up in the liver, and restores biochemical equilibrium to the whole body. At the end of the program, a patient's body will no longer depend on alcohol - or any other controlled substance to regulate itself. The Narconon alcohol rehabilitation program also gives patients the mental tools and mental balance to recover from alcohol abuse. With a healthfully restored mental equilibrium, graduates are able to take conscious control of their lives and goals and live purposefully. By consciously controlling the direction of their life, patients thus stop alcohol use naturally, purposefully, permanently, and without fear.


Because alcohol addiction was a person's way of inducing one or more of physical, mental and emotional relaxation, ease, and even escapism, at Narconon we educate clients about the biology of alcohol abuse and teach them to view their alcohol addiction as a biochemical process that must be and can be regulated. Narconon's scientifically proven withdrawal proccess, coupled with emotional counseling and the reformation of the body's biochemical process, creates a thorough mind/body detoxification approach that frees people from alcohol addiction, alcohol abuse, and all the consequences of addiction that ultimately prevent them back from true happiness.



Alcohol effects

Alcohol affects people differently, depending on their size, sex, body build, and metabolism. General effects are a feeling of warmth, flushed skin, impaired judgment, decreased inhibitions, muscular in coordination, slurred speech, and memory and comprehension loss. In states of extreme intoxication, vomiting is likely to occur, possibly accompanied by incontinence, poor respiration, a fall in blood pressure, and in cases of severe alcohol poisoning, coma and death.
Drinking heavily over a short period of time usually results in a "hangover" - headache, nausea, shakiness, and sometimes vomiting, beginning from 8 to 12 hours later. A hangover is due partly to poisoning by alcohol and other components of the drink, and partly to the body's reaction to withdrawal from alcohol.

Combining alcohol with other drugs can make the effects of these other drugs much stronger and more dangerous. Many accidental deaths have occurred after people have used alcohol combined with other drugs. Cannabis, tranquillizers, barbiturates and other sleeping pills, or antihistamines (in cold, cough, and allergy remedies) should not be taken with alcohol. Even a small amount of alcohol with any of these drugs can seriously impair a person's ability to drive a car.

People who drink on a regular basis become tolerant to many of the unpleasant effects of alcohol, and thus are able to drink more before suffering these effects. Yet even with increased consumption, many such drinkers don't appear intoxicated. Because they continue to work and socialize reasonably well, their deteriorating physical condition may go unrecognized by others until severe damage develops - or until they are hospitalized for other reasons and suddenly experience alcohol withdrawal symptoms.
Psychological dependence on alcohol may occur with regular use of even relatively moderate daily amounts. It may also occur in people who consume alcohol only under certain conditions, such as before and during social occasions. This form of dependence refers to a craving for alcohol's psychological effects, although not necessarily in amounts that produce serious intoxication. For psychologically dependent drinkers, the lack of alcohol tends to make them anxious and, in some cases, panicky.

Physical dependence occurs in consistently heavy drinkers. Since their bodies have adapted to the presence of alcohol, they suffer withdrawal symptoms if they suddenly stop drinking. Withdrawal symptoms range from jumpiness, sleeplessness, sweating, and poor appetite, to tremors (the "shakes"), convulsions. hallucinations. and sometimes death. Alcohol abuse can take a negative toll on people's lives, fostering violence or a deterioration of personal relationships. Alcoholic behavior can interfere with school or career goals and lead to unemployment.


Long term alcohol abuse poses a variety of health risks, such as liver damage and an increased risk for heart disease. Fetal Alcohol Syndrome may result from a pregnant woman's drinking alcohol; this condition causes facial abnormalities in the child, as well as growth retardation and brain damage, which often is manifested by intellectual difficulties or behavioral problems.
posted by dannzfay @ Friday, May 11, 2007  
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