To all those who have some idea of the different drugs used as a release from a stressful life, cannabis may not be considered as addictive a drug as many others. Research conducted on the effects of this drug has revealed that people who consume this drug are not known to be physically dependant on it. Instead, there is a severe emotional dependency on cannabis if it is administered over a period of time.
The damaging effects of a socially accepted drug
Many people feel that cannabis is a relatively harmless drug. For this reason, it is relatively socially accepted. Unfortunately, cannabis can result in a devastating impact on not just the user, but also that person’s family and friends. The onset of cannabis addiction can be severe and rapid and most users find that their addiction frequently spirals out of control. If prevented from intake of the drug, users tend to feel frightened and panicked.
Habitual users of cannabis usually experience different levels of anxiety, depression and paranoia. Most users feel de-motivated to do anything other than taking the drug. Cannabis addiction needs to be taken care of as soon as symptoms are noticed otherwise it can become very difficult for the user to kick the habit.
A person with cannabis addiction does not tend to seek help until symptoms have reached very serious levels. Generally, it is the addict’s family who reaches out for help initially. Despite how serious cannabis addiction can become, treatment for addicts can be very effective in helping them overcome their problems.

Tranquillity
Before the second half of the 19th century, the dominant medical and popular notions of disease rested on a humoral theory, first put forward by Hippocrates and Aristotle, and then Galen, later in the 2nd century AD. According to this theory, there were humours – phlegm, choler, bile and sanguine – and diseases resulted from an imbalance between them, or an imbalance between the humoral state of the individual and conditions in the environment (1).
A version of this theory survives to this day in the Chinese notions of yin and yang, which are popular in alternative medicine settings, and in the three dhosas of Ayurvedic medicine. The yin and yang notions and four humours theory are very similar in their trust. In each case what is aimed at is a state of harmony. Treatment consists of efforts to restore balance or internal equilibrium. Until the last century, this was done by regulating diet or by bleeding, purging, inducing vomiting, raising blisters (in which noxious vapours could collect), or giving a variety of tonics – agents that were stimulant or strengthening in some way. Diet and tonics of various sorts remain the most popular methods today. Read more…
If the induction of appetites and cravings, which has been hitherto seen as psychological dependence, is not in fact any more psychological than the physical dependence that underlies withdrawal, is there any other psychology involved? There almost certainly is (1). For example LSD, phencyclidine and many of the new designer drugs do not cause either type 1 or 2 physical dependence. Yet they are increasingly abused, despite evidence that many of these compounds may be fatal. Phencyclidine, for example, has led to a considerable number of fatalities and, despite not leading to any obvious euphoria, during the 1980s became for a period the second most common drug of abuse in the USA. Why?
Common to many of these drugs is the fact that they alter consciousness and, as a result, are interesting to take. On tis basis, one explanation that may account psychedelics, opiates or alcohol, there is a certain amount of playful activity. Read more…
Categories: Addiction Treatment, Alcohol Addiction, Drug Addiction, Glossary Tags: Alcohol, Alcohol Addiction, Alcohol Addiction Treatment, Alcohol Detox, Alcoholic, Alcoholism, Drug, Drug Abuse, Drug Addiction, Drug Addiction Treatment, Drug Use, Drugs, Glossary
Over the past two decades there appears to have been a shift within health care from an expectation that patients with medical problems should entrust themselves passively to the care of physicians to an expectation that they should co-operate in their own care and indeed have some responsibility for the outcome of medical procedures they undergo. The changes are reflected in the terms we used; the word patient, which means someone who endures, is being replaced by terms such as client or consumer, which suggest a more active and discriminating participant in the medical process.
Nowhere is this shift more clear than when it comes to the question of what is known as informed consent. Informed consent was not an issue in medical practice 20 years ago. Today it forms a central issue in a number of ethical codes from the Nuremberg Code to the Helsinki Code as well as Codes originating from the Food and Drugs Administration (FDA) in the United States and the US Department of Health. Read more…
Categories: Addiction Treatment, Depression, Drug Addiction, Glossary, Major Depression, Mental Health, PTSD (Post Traumatic Stress Disorder), Schizophrenia, Stress Tags: Accesory Drugs, Addiction, Addiction Treatment, Addiction Treatment Methods, Addictions, Antimuscarinic Drugs, Anxiety, Anxiety Treatment, Depression, Depression Treatment, Drug, Drug Abuse, Drug Addiction, Drug Addiction Treatment, Drug Addiction Treatment Methods, Drug Use, Drugs, Glossary, Mental Health, Mental Health Treatment, performance enhancing drugs, Prescription Drugs, Stress, Stress Treatment

Separation Liability
Liability for drug induced injuries did not become an issue of general concern until quite recently. However, a number of drug-induced problems from thalidomide in the 1960s to Opren and diethylstilbestrol in the 1970s have caused widespread public disquiet and led to increasing awareness of issues to do with liability. In psychiatry, concern in the UK focuses on the question of benzodiazepine prescribing, while in the US the paramount issue concerns the occurrence of tardive dyskinesia in individuals taking neuroleptics. The question has become an emotive one with some commentators who survey the problem referring to the appalling frequency of drug-induced injury, while others comment on its astonishing tray (1). Whatever the absolute frequencies, contrary probably to public belief, the evidence suggests that the larger the pharmaceutical company, the better its practice regarding drug safety is likely to be (2).
Drug-induced problems may stem from toxic effects of a drug, or toxic effects caused by an impure additive, or from allergic reactions to the drug or its additive. Problems may also stem from over prescribing. For instance, in the case of someone who dies from a resistant bacterial infection, a relative could claim that the subject’s death arose in part from the excessive prescription of antibiotics that in its own right brings about the production of resistant infections. In the case of neuroleptics, problems may be brought about by the overuse of these drugs but this overuse, far from being solely promoted by drug companies stems in part from the current politics of mental health – deaths have stemmed from rapid tranquillisation often by harassed staff in psychiatric units. Read more…
Categories: Addiction Treatment, Benzodiazepine Addiction, Depression, Drug Addiction, Glossary, Major Depression, Mental Health, Schizophrenia, Stress Tags: Addiction, Addiction Treatment, Addiction Treatment Methods, Addictions, Anxiety, Anxiety Treatment, Depression, Depression Treatment, Glossary, Major Depression, Major Depression Treatment, Mental Health, Mental Health Treatment, Schizophrenia, Schizophrenia Treatment, Stress, Stress Treatment

Dependence
Before considering this in detail, we must exclude a type of physical dependence that occurs with a great number of drugs and ordinarily is of little consequence. Many drugs will cause rebound symptoms once they are discontinued. This happens particularly if they block receptors. This blockade leads to the blocked receptors becoming hypersensitive. When the blocking drug is then removed, these receptors are flooded with the normal neurotransmitter and they respond vigorously. It may take 48-72 hours for them to settle back down to normal.
Examples of this are the rebound phenomena that may occur with beta-blockers, such as propranolol, and the cholinergic rebound that may happen after stopping antidepressants with marked anticholinergic effects. Propranolol rebound may lead to palpitations, sweating and flushing. Cholinergic rebound may produce poor sleep and nausea or vomiting. These syndromes are not serious, and high doses of the relevant compounds are stopped abruptly. Read more…
Categories: Addiction Treatment, Alcohol Addiction, Benzodiazepine Addiction, Drug Addiction, Glossary Tags: Addiction, Addiction Treatment, Addiction Treatment Methods, Addictions, Alcohol, Alcohol Addiction, Alcohol Addiction Treatment, Benzodiazepine, Benzodiazepine Addiction, Benzodiazepine Addiction Treatment, Glossary, Propranolol, Treatment Methods

Dependence
The issues of dependence and withdrawal have come up repeatedly through the previous articles we published. They are a primary concern of any taker of psycho-active medication. Some outline of current thinking on these issues therefore seems called for.
It has been traditional to distinguish between physical dependence and psychological dependence. Physical dependence is the state that produces withdrawal syndromes – of which the classic instances are alcohol induced delirium tremens and opiate-induced cold turkey. This is assumed to be physical because withdrawal syndromes are usually intensely physical states with shakes, palpitations, sweating and sometimes even convulsions and death. Some have argued that many individuals are trapped into continuing use of drugs out of a terror at the prospect of withdrawal. Read more…

Dementia
Part of the problem in finding drugs which may be effective for dementia is that our ideas about what constitutes dementia have been undergoing radical change in recent years. It had been traditional to distinguish between Alzheimer’s dementia, or senile dementia of the Alzheimer’s type (SDAT) and multi-infarct dementia (MID), which is theoretically caused by small strokes which insidiously pick off brain tissue to the point where an individual’s cognitive function is compromised. Read more…
Categories: Depression, Glossary, Major Depression, Mental Health, Stress Tags: Acute Anxiety, Alzheimer's Dementia, Anxiety, Anxiety Disorder, Anxiety Treatment, Dementia, Dementia Treatment, Depression, Depression Treatment, Glossary, Major Depression, Major Depression Treatment, Mental Health, Mental Health Treatment

Barbiturates
Concerns about the over-prescription of benzodiazepines in recent years have led some prescribers to look at alternative hypnotic agents – either older compounds such as members of the barbiturate or chloral families, antidepressants, or neuroleptics with a sedative profile. There are a number of problems with such prescriptions as will become clear.
Chloral Compounds
Chloral compounds (see the table below) were first produced in 1869. Their sedative effects were quickly recognised, leading to their use as hypnotics among other things. A number of factors militated against their widespread use. One was the difficulty in making them in other than foul tasting liquid formats. The subsequent discovery of the barbiturates, just before the First World War, largely put paid to them. Before that, however, many patients admitted to mental hospitals were treated with chloral draughts and would appear to have done well. Read more…
Categories: Addiction Treatment, Benzodiazepine Addiction, Drug Addiction, Glossary, Mental Health, Stress Tags: Addiction, Addiction Treatment Methods, Addictions, Antidepressants, Barbiturates, Benzodiazepine, Benzodiazepine Addiction, Chloral Compounds, Chlormethiazole, Drug, Drug Abuse, Drug Addiction, Drug Addiction Treatment, Drug Use, Drugs, Gastric Irritation, Glossary, Heartburn, Hypnotics, Mental Health, Tricyclic Antidepressants