Monday, May 2, 2011

Chapter 12

Chapter 12 centered around the use, misuse, and abuse of mind-altering drugs. It gave a general overview of how alcohol, tobacco and other drugs are used and abused on a community-level setting. For example, many people may use drugs because of coping with personal problems, giving in to peer pressure, more thoroughly enjoying social interactions, curious experimentation, a brazen attempt to escape from reality, and attempts to self-medicate.  A point that I can’t stress enough is that even though the chapter lists a large amount of reasons to take drugs does not mean that people should be more encouraged to take them!
Another topic in this chapter was that of drug dependency; the behaviors that I listed above are all factors that encourage drug dependency. Furthermore, if an individual experiences a drug abuse problem, their health and behavior will suffer greatly.  Drug misuse is the inappropriate use of any drug, while drug abuse refers to the taking of a drug that has not been medically approved for the specific individual with proper knowledge of the health risks.  Finally, drug dependency occurs when the user believes that taking a certain drug is absolutely necessary for everyday life.  Drug dependency is psychological problem that can be properly described as an illness; it needs to be treated as a medical problem in order to be resolved.
Drug abuse in the United States was a constantly rising trend in the 1990s, but proper educated has helped to stem the tide, and since 1998, it has decreased. Everybody knows that legal drugs, dependent on age, are alcohol and tobacco, while illegal drugs include stimulates, depressants, narcotics hallucinogens, marijuana, and others that are not prescribed by a doctor.  Surprisingly, illegal drugs are not as big of a problem as the abuse of prescription drugs; it is a common fad among teens to ingest a mixture of mystery prescription drugs at parties; however, this practice commonly leads to death.
The first step to negating drug use and abuse is to use preventative tactics. There are four elements of drug prevention and control: education, treatment, public policy, and law enforcement. Prevention has three levels, which are primary, secondary, and tertiary. The United States has been making a concerted effort in recent years to address prevention on the federal, state, and local levels.  For example, the government has implemented programs that involve drug testing in the work environment since 1987, a practice that steadily decreases workplace drug use.

Chapter 9

Chapter 9 gives an in-depth discussion of the elderly community. This chapter exposes us to a plethora of different terms such as aged ‘geriatric’, ‘aging’ and many more.  The study of aging from the broadest range is called ‘gerontology,’ while the term ‘geriatrics’ is the medical practice that specializes with the treatment of those that are aging. The term ‘elders’ refers to the group of people that are currently 65 years old or older. Not only did this chapter define all of the important terms that goes along with aging but it also talked about the many different programs that are created to help assist the elderly. There are programs for healthcare such as medicaide along with a large amount of programs that help to assist the elderly in their living styles.  These services include programs to drive for the elderly, to bring them meals, and to provide housing. I’m glad that the book defined all these words because it helps the reader toddevelop a more thorough understanding of aging and getting old. Many questions that arose regarding the elderly, especially regarding the aging baby boomer generation came up in this discussion, including but not limited to: Will they deplete the social security fund? What does it mean to be “old”? Where can we house them comfortably? How do we afford living expenses and medical coverage? When does a person become classified as old? Essentially, “aging” is a set of changes that occur during the process of growing older.