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Drug
abuse is characterized by taking more than the recommended
dose of prescription drugs such as barbiturates without
medical supervision, or using government-controlled
substances such as marijuana, cocaine, heroin, or other
illegal substances. Legal substances, such as alcohol
and nicotine, are also abused by many people. Abuse
of drugs and other substances can lead to physical and
psychological dependence.
Drug abuse can cause a wide variety of adverse physical
reactions. Long-term drug use may damage the heart,
liver, and brain. Drug abusers may suffer from malnutrition
if they habitually forget to eat, cannot afford to buy
food, or eat foods lacking the proper vitamins and minerals.
Individuals who abuse injectable drugs risk contracting
infections such as hepatitis and HIV from dirty needles
or needles shared with other infected abusers. One of
the most dangerous effects of illegal drug use is the
potential for overdosing-that is, taking too large or
too strong a dose for the body's systems to handle.
A drug overdose may cause an individual to lose consciousness
and to breathe inadequately. Without treatment, an individual
may die from a drug overdose.
Drug addiction is marked by a compulsive craving for
a substance. Successful treatment methods vary and include
psychological counseling, or psychotherapy, and detoxification
programs-medically supervised programs that gradually
wean an individual from a drug over a period of days
or weeks. Detoxification and psychotherapy are often
used together.
The illegal use of drugs was once considered a problem
unique to residents of poor, urban neighborhoods. Today,
however, people from all economic levels, in both cities
and suburbs, abuse drugs. Some people use drugs to relieve
stress and to forget about their problems. Genetic factors
may predispose other individuals to drug addiction.
Environmental factors such as peer pressure, especially
in young people, and the availability of drugs, also
influence people to abuse drugs.
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