Final Health Exam
Why Students don't use drugs
Spirituality
Academic engagement
Perceived harmfulness
Athletics
Why Students Do!
Parental attitudes
Positive expectations
Social Influence
Self Medication
Social Norms
Drug misuse: use of drugs for purpose (or person) other than which it was medically intended.
Drug: any substance, other than food, that affects bodily functions.
Toxicity: poisonous
Polyabuse: misuse or abuse of more than one drug.
Oral dosage: most common method, thirty minutes to feel the drug
Inhalation: Less than ten seconds
Subcutaneous Injection: About ten minutes
Intramuscular Injection: within a few minutes
Intravenous Injection: immediately.
Caffeine: Most widely used psychotropic (Mind-affecting) drug.
Marijuana
Mild sense of euphoria, sense of slowed time, dreamy type of self-absorption, some impairment in thinking and communicating.
Marijuana withdrawal syndrome: characterized by insomnia, restlessness, loss of appetite, and irritability.
Negative long term effects of marijuana
Dulls sensory and cognitive skills
Impairs short term memory
Leads to difficulty in concentration
Increased heart rate and blood pressure
Increases risk for lung cancer
Synthetic Marijuana
Elevated mood, relaxation, altered perception, agitation, nausea, paranoia, anxiety, dizziness, confusion.
Synthetic Cathinone (Bath Salts)
Intense stimulation, alertness, euphoria, and increased sociability, adverse side effects include: paranoia, agitation and hallucinations
Ecstasy
Stimulant and mildly hallucinogenic
How user feel: Peace with self and connectedness with others
Risks: confusion, depression, involuntary teeth clenching, rapid eye moving
Stimulants: Amphetamine/Methamphetamine
How Users feel
Amphetamines produce state of hyper-alertness and energy
Meth, psychosis, violence, seizures.
Long term side effects: Malnutrition, skin disorders, depression, impaired concentration or memory
Cocaine
Feelings of soaring well-being and boundless energy
Withdrawal symptoms: depression, fatigue, vivid and disturbing dreams.
Severe psychological problems
Suppresses desire for food, sex, and sleep
Can cause strokes, seizures, and neurological damage.
Depressants
How users feel: reduce or relieve tension, but may cause rapid mood changes and impaired judgment.
Opioids
How users feel: Relax the user, and impart feelings of euphoria while acting as powerful narcotics or painkillers.
Side effects: addiction, lethargy, weight loss, insomnia, and restlessness.
Hallucinogens
Drugs that produce vivid and unusual changes in thought, self-awareness, emotion, and perception.
Natural sources: peyote cactus, and psychedelic mushrooms, LDS, PCD
Inhalants
Vapors that cause psychoactive effects when inhaled or sniffed (huffing)
Side effects: depressed muscle tone, damage to the liver and kidneys
Why students don't drink
No access
Parental Pressure
Peer Pressure
Costs
Why they do
Social Norms
Living Arrangements
Positive Expectations
Coping
Men- no more than two drinks per day
Women- No more than one drink per day
Binge drinking: Men- five or more drinks
Women, Four or more drinks
Why students binge drink?
Low cost
Easy access
Peer pressure/drinking games
Consequences Of Drinking
Atypical behavior
Academic Problems
Risky sexual behavior
Unintentional injury
BAC LVL
0.08 percent- legal limit
0.20 percent- individual may pass out
0.30 percent- individual may go into a coma
0.40 percent- individual may die (Lethal)
Factors that affect BAC
How much and how quickly you drink
What you're drinking
Your size
Eating
Alcohol Intoxication
Slurred speech
Poor coordination
Unsteady gait
Stupor
coma
Alcohol Poisoning
Mental confusion
Stupor
Coma
Vomiting
Slow breathing
Alcohol in a typical drink reaches the bloodstream in fifteen minutes.
Effects of alcohol abuse
Weakens heart muscles
Destroys brain cells
Destroys liver cells
Fetal Alcohol Syndrome
Small head
Abnormal; facial features
Mentally challenged
Medical complications
Liver disease
Cancer
Brain Damage
Higher mortality
What causes alcohol dependence and abuse
Genetics
Stress and traumatic experiences
Parental alcoholism
Drug abuse
Factors linked to smoking
Age
Education
Why students smoke
Reduce stress
Can’t stop
Social smoker
experiment
Why do they keep smoking?
Pleasure
Mental disorders
Dependence
Signs of addiction first appear within a few days of smoking
Women are at a greater risk of lung cancer, decreased fertility, increased risk of miscarriage
Men are at a greater risk of prostate cancer, impaired sexual performance, and erectile dysfunction
Nicotine spreads to the nervous system in 8 seconds
Triggers the release of tranquilizing morphine like amino acids
Bloodstream absorbs nicotine
Heartbeat quickens
Vessels constrict causing higher blood pressure
Mainstream smoke
Smoke inhaled directly by smoking a cigarette
Sidestream smoke
The smoke emitted by a burning cigarette and breathed by everyone in a closed room, including the smoker.
Nicotine Withdrawal
Signs: craving, restlessness, increased appetite
FYI..
A smokers lifespan is shorter on average by 7 to 10 years
Heart attack is the leading cause of death in smokers
Smoking causes 80% of lung cancer
Why Students don't use drugs
Spirituality
Academic engagement
Perceived harmfulness
Athletics
Why Students Do!
Parental attitudes
Positive expectations
Social Influence
Self Medication
Social Norms
Drug misuse: use of drugs for purpose (or person) other than which it was medically intended.
Drug: any substance, other than food, that affects bodily functions.
Toxicity: poisonous
Polyabuse: misuse or abuse of more than one drug.
Oral dosage: most common method, thirty minutes to feel the drug
Inhalation: Less than ten seconds
Subcutaneous Injection: About ten minutes
Intramuscular Injection: within a few minutes
Intravenous Injection: immediately.
Caffeine: Most widely used psychotropic (Mind-affecting) drug.
Marijuana
Mild sense of euphoria, sense of slowed time, dreamy type of self-absorption, some impairment in thinking and communicating.
Marijuana withdrawal syndrome: characterized by insomnia, restlessness, loss of appetite, and irritability.
Negative long term effects of marijuana
Dulls sensory and cognitive skills
Impairs short term memory
Leads to difficulty in concentration
Increased heart rate and blood pressure
Increases risk for lung cancer
Synthetic Marijuana
Elevated mood, relaxation, altered perception, agitation, nausea, paranoia, anxiety, dizziness, confusion.
Synthetic Cathinone (Bath Salts)
Intense stimulation, alertness, euphoria, and increased sociability, adverse side effects include: paranoia, agitation and hallucinations
Ecstasy
Stimulant and mildly hallucinogenic
How user feel: Peace with self and connectedness with others
Risks: confusion, depression, involuntary teeth clenching, rapid eye moving
Stimulants: Amphetamine/Methamphetamine
How Users feel
Amphetamines produce state of hyper-alertness and energy
Meth, psychosis, violence, seizures.
Long term side effects: Malnutrition, skin disorders, depression, impaired concentration or memory
Cocaine
Feelings of soaring well-being and boundless energy
Withdrawal symptoms: depression, fatigue, vivid and disturbing dreams.
Severe psychological problems
Suppresses desire for food, sex, and sleep
Can cause strokes, seizures, and neurological damage.
Depressants
How users feel: reduce or relieve tension, but may cause rapid mood changes and impaired judgment.
Opioids
How users feel: Relax the user, and impart feelings of euphoria while acting as powerful narcotics or painkillers.
Side effects: addiction, lethargy, weight loss, insomnia, and restlessness.
Hallucinogens
Drugs that produce vivid and unusual changes in thought, self-awareness, emotion, and perception.
Natural sources: peyote cactus, and psychedelic mushrooms, LDS, PCD
Inhalants
Vapors that cause psychoactive effects when inhaled or sniffed (huffing)
Side effects: depressed muscle tone, damage to the liver and kidneys
Why students don't drink
No access
Parental Pressure
Peer Pressure
Costs
Why they do
Social Norms
Living Arrangements
Positive Expectations
Coping
Men- no more than two drinks per day
Women- No more than one drink per day
Binge drinking: Men- five or more drinks
Women, Four or more drinks
Why students binge drink?
Low cost
Easy access
Peer pressure/drinking games
Consequences Of Drinking
Atypical behavior
Academic Problems
Risky sexual behavior
Unintentional injury
BAC LVL
0.08 percent- legal limit
0.20 percent- individual may pass out
0.30 percent- individual may go into a coma
0.40 percent- individual may die (Lethal)
Factors that affect BAC
How much and how quickly you drink
What you're drinking
Your size
Eating
Alcohol Intoxication
Slurred speech
Poor coordination
Unsteady gait
Stupor
coma
Alcohol Poisoning
Mental confusion
Stupor
Coma
Vomiting
Slow breathing
Alcohol in a typical drink reaches the bloodstream in fifteen minutes.
Effects of alcohol abuse
Weakens heart muscles
Destroys brain cells
Destroys liver cells
Fetal Alcohol Syndrome
Small head
Abnormal; facial features
Mentally challenged
Medical complications
Liver disease
Cancer
Brain Damage
Higher mortality
What causes alcohol dependence and abuse
Genetics
Stress and traumatic experiences
Parental alcoholism
Drug abuse
Factors linked to smoking
Age
Education
Why students smoke
Reduce stress
Can’t stop
Social smoker
experiment
Why do they keep smoking?
Pleasure
Mental disorders
Dependence
Signs of addiction first appear within a few days of smoking
Women are at a greater risk of lung cancer, decreased fertility, increased risk of miscarriage
Men are at a greater risk of prostate cancer, impaired sexual performance, and erectile dysfunction
Nicotine spreads to the nervous system in 8 seconds
Triggers the release of tranquilizing morphine like amino acids
Bloodstream absorbs nicotine
Heartbeat quickens
Vessels constrict causing higher blood pressure
Mainstream smoke
Smoke inhaled directly by smoking a cigarette
Sidestream smoke
The smoke emitted by a burning cigarette and breathed by everyone in a closed room, including the smoker.
Nicotine Withdrawal
Signs: craving, restlessness, increased appetite
FYI..
A smokers lifespan is shorter on average by 7 to 10 years
Heart attack is the leading cause of death in smokers
Smoking causes 80% of lung cancer