(855) 778-6444

Study Shows Alcohol Abuse May be Helped by Brief Counseling but Drug Abuse is Not

alcohol abuse, drug abuse, counseling

alcohol abuse, drug abuse, counseling

 

Alcohol abuse may be helped by a brief period of counseling but this is not the case with drug abuse according to a new study by Boston University. For more than 10 years the Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration, an agency of the United States federal government, has recommended substance abuse screenings and brief periods of counseling for alcohol and drug abuse. According to the Boston University study the results of these recommendations are somewhat surprising. The approach used was often effective for individuals who engaged in alcohol abuse, but the effectiveness dropped sharply when drug abuse was studied.

According to Dr. Richard Saitz, the leader of the study and the Boston University School of Public Health community health sciences chairman, “Brief counseling can work for a lot of things, but we found no evidence to support the widespread implementation of universal screening and brief intervention for illicit drug use or prescription drug misuse. In retrospect, drug use is a complicated problem. While there might have been some hope that something as simple as this would work, it now appears it doesn’t. People who are using drugs and admit to using drugs are already doing something not socially sanctioned, so getting them to change their behavior may be harder.” Saitz went on to state “Despite many reasons to not use, they are continuing to do so. A few minutes of counseling is not going to change that. Because each drug is different a universal intervention is especially difficult. What works to address marijuana use may not work to stop heroin injecting, for example. One-time brief counseling is simply inadequate to address these complexities, even as an initial strategy. Even with alcohol use multiple interventions have been more successful than one-time sessions.”

 

What are the Top Drug Abuse Risk Factors?

drug abuse risk factors, drug abuse

Drug abuse risk factors can help determine whether you are likely to end up abusing drugs, and there are many of these risk factors that parents and family members should know. Some of the top drug abuse risk factors may be common knowledge, but others are far less known. Substance abuse affects individuals of all sexes, races, ages, economic backgrounds, and family histories. The risk factors involved can be different in every single case, so any treatment plan will need to discover the risk factors that an individual has before treatment and recovery can begin. The top drug abuse risk factors can include:

  • A family history of drug abuse and addiction. This is also true if the family history involves alcohol abuse or addiction.

  • The sex of the individual is also one of the drug abuse risk factors. Men are twice as likely to engage in drug use as women are, so males have a higher rate of substance abuse.

  • Drug abuse risk factors include having one or more mental illnesses or disorders. Depression, mania, schizophrenia, ADHD, PTSD, and other mental disorders may cause the individual to turn to drug abuse in order to self medicate their symptoms.

  • Peer pressure can be one of the big drug abuse risk factors, especially for teens and young adults.

  • Loneliness and anxiety are both drug abuse risk factors, and the individual may start to use in order to feel better or forget their social isolation.

  • Little family involvement and communication is another of the drug abuse risk factors.

  • Taking a drug that is highly addictive can cause addiction, even if the drug is only used once.

What other drug abuse risk factors do you know about?