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Alcohol Goldberg Chapter 6 SOC 204 Drugs & Society
47
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Page 1: SOC 204 Goldberg Ch 6  Week 3

AlcoholGoldberg Chapter 6

SOC 204 Drugs & Society

Page 2: SOC 204 Goldberg Ch 6  Week 3

Alcohol

• Fermentation

• Distillation

• Proof

Page 3: SOC 204 Goldberg Ch 6  Week 3

Pharmacology• Absorption• Distribution• Metabolism• Mechanism of Action• BLOOD ALCOHOL

CONTENT

Page 4: SOC 204 Goldberg Ch 6  Week 3

Alcohol is metabolized in your liver

A. True

B. False

True

False

0%0%

Page 5: SOC 204 Goldberg Ch 6  Week 3

You can increase your rate of metabolizing

alcohol by exercise or by taking caffeine

A. True

B. False

True

False

0%0%

Page 6: SOC 204 Goldberg Ch 6  Week 3

Alcohol’s Effects

• Alcohol acts on the cerebrum affecting

▫ Judgment

▫ Reasoning

▫ Inhibitions

▫ Motor activity

▫ Impairs the senses

• Mouse Party

Page 7: SOC 204 Goldberg Ch 6  Week 3

Alcohol primarily impacts this part of

the brain:

A. Limbic system

B. Cerebellum

C. Cerebral cortex

D. Basal ganglia

Limbic

syst

em

Cerebellu

m

Cerebra

l cort

ex

Basal g

anglia

0% 0%0%0%

Page 8: SOC 204 Goldberg Ch 6  Week 3

Alcohol sedates by increasing

glutamate’s action – an agonist

response.

A. True

B. False

True

False

0%0%

Page 9: SOC 204 Goldberg Ch 6  Week 3

Alcoholism

• Alcoholism ▫ Condition in which an individual loses control over

intake of alcohol

• Substance Use Disorder▫ Physical, social, intellectual, emotional, or financial

problems resulting from the use of alcohol▫ Withdrawal symptoms▫ Tolerance▫ Blackouts

Page 10: SOC 204 Goldberg Ch 6  Week 3

Alcoholism

• Some consider alcoholism to be a disease

▫ Compared to heart disease or diabetes

▫ 1956 American Medical Association declared it a disease

▫ Disease can be used as a legal defense

▫ Receive treatment rather than punishment

Page 11: SOC 204 Goldberg Ch 6  Week 3

Do you agree alcoholism is a disease?

A. Yes

B. No

C. I’m not sure

YesNo

I’m n

ot sure

0% 0%0%

Page 12: SOC 204 Goldberg Ch 6  Week 3

Alcoholism

• Genetics

▫ 50-60% of alcoholism vulnerability has a genetic basis

▫ Environmental factors affect the impact of genetics

Page 13: SOC 204 Goldberg Ch 6  Week 3

Alcoholism

• Psychosocial factors

▫ 20% of alcoholics have a mood or anxiety disorder

▫ Individuals are more likely to drink heavily when in a group

▫ Expectations about alcohol are predictors of dependence

▫ Associated with a greater number of sexual partners

Page 14: SOC 204 Goldberg Ch 6  Week 3

Alcoholism

• Culture

▫ Attitudes toward alcohol affect rates of alcohol abuse

Page 15: SOC 204 Goldberg Ch 6  Week 3

Alcohol Withdrawal

• Characteristics of alcohol withdrawal:

▫ Craving for alcohol

▫ Delirium tremens (DTs)

▫ Extreme arousal

▫ Auditory and visual hallucinations

▫ Physiological symptoms

▫ Cognitive symptoms

Page 16: SOC 204 Goldberg Ch 6  Week 3

Impacts of AlcoholIndividual

Family Society

Page 17: SOC 204 Goldberg Ch 6  Week 3

Family Effects

• Children of alcoholics▫ Often experience sleep difficulties, depression,

loneliness, and stomach problems▫ Alienated from parents, have poor communication

skills, less trust, and more emotional longing▫ Attention deficit hyperactivity disorder (ADHD)

• Adult children of alcoholics (ACOAs)▫ Feelings of failure and self-deprecation▫ Feel a great need to be in control

Page 18: SOC 204 Goldberg Ch 6  Week 3

Addict

• Behaviors▫ Use of

chemicals▫ Abusive▫ Controlling▫ Withdrawal of

love, attention, affection

▫ Blaming▫ Anger▫ Self-

righteousness

Underlying feeling:

SHAME

Page 19: SOC 204 Goldberg Ch 6  Week 3

Co-Dependent

• Behaviors

▫ Rescuing

▫ Excusing

▫ Denial

▫ Helplessness

▫ Martyr

Underlying feeling:

ANGER

Page 20: SOC 204 Goldberg Ch 6  Week 3

Hero

• Behaviors▫ The “Good Kid”

▫ High achiever

▫ Successful

▫ Overly responsible

▫ Intellectual

Underlying feeling:

INADEQUACY

Page 21: SOC 204 Goldberg Ch 6  Week 3

Scapegoat

• Behaviors▫ Acting out

▫ Defiant

▫ Peer-oriented

▫ Sullen, angry

▫ Irresponsible

▫ Chemical use

▫ Law breaking, truancy

Underlying feeling:

HURT

Page 22: SOC 204 Goldberg Ch 6  Week 3

Lost Child

• Behaviors

▫ Withdrawn

▫ Loner

▫ Day dreamer

▫ Unnoticed

Underlying Feeling:

LONELINESS

Page 23: SOC 204 Goldberg Ch 6  Week 3

Mascot

• Behaviors

▫ Attention-getting

▫ Humor

▫ Clowning

▫ Super cute

▫ Overly active

▫ Silly

Underlying Feeling: FEAR

Page 24: SOC 204 Goldberg Ch 6  Week 3

COSTS• Hero

▫ Compulsive drive, pressure, suicide

• Scapegoat

▫ Addiction, criminal behavior, drop out

• Lost Child

▫ Isolation, abuse victim, eating disorders

• Mascot

▫ Immaturity, distant relationships, manipulation

Page 25: SOC 204 Goldberg Ch 6  Week 3

Which do you most identify with?

A. Addict

B. Co-dependent

C. Hero

D. Scapegoat

E. Lost Child

F. Mascot

Addict

Co-dependent

Hero

Scapego

at

Lost

Child

Masc

ot

22%

0%

11%

33%

11%

22%

Page 26: SOC 204 Goldberg Ch 6  Week 3

Correlations with

ViolenceAs alcohol use escalates, so does violence

▫ Domestic partner violence 66%

▫ Sexual Assault 37%

▫ Homicides 40%

▫ Child abuse 70%

http://www.ph.ucla.edu/sciprc/pdf/ALCOHOL_AND_VIOLENCE.pdf

Page 27: SOC 204 Goldberg Ch 6  Week 3

Suicide

▫ About 7% of alcoholics commit suicide

▫ 16% of men and 10% of women entering alcohol treatment have contemplated suicide

▫ 38% of people who hanged themselves had alcohol in their system

▫ 32% of veterans who attempted suicide were diagnosed with alcohol abuse or disorder

Page 28: SOC 204 Goldberg Ch 6  Week 3

Accidents and Alcohol

▫ Drinking while driving Emergency room admissions

▫ Fire-related fatalities

▫ Alcohol-related boating accidents

▫ Drowning fatalities

YouTube

Page 29: SOC 204 Goldberg Ch 6  Week 3
Page 30: SOC 204 Goldberg Ch 6  Week 3

Prohibition

• Temperance Movement – view of alcohol

• Prohibition • States 1851

• Federal 1919

• Repealed in 1933• Since 1933, states

regulate alcohol • Federal taxation

Page 31: SOC 204 Goldberg Ch 6  Week 3

Total estimated U.S. per capita ethanol consumption in gallons per year by state, 2007

Source: Data from NIAAA

© 2011 McGraw-Hill Higher Education. All rights reserved.

Page 32: SOC 204 Goldberg Ch 6  Week 3

Who drinks and why

• Cultural Differences

• Trends in US

• Regional Differences

• Gender Differences

• Drinking Among College Students

Page 33: SOC 204 Goldberg Ch 6  Week 3

Most college students reduce their

binge drinking after graduating

from college.

A.True

B.False

True

False

0%0%

Page 34: SOC 204 Goldberg Ch 6  Week 3

The younger one is when drinking

alcohol for the first time, the more

likely one will become a problem

drinker.

A.True

B.False

True

False

0%0%

Page 35: SOC 204 Goldberg Ch 6  Week 3

Underage Drinking

• Underage drinking is associated with premature death, disease, injury, property damage, motor vehicle crashes, alcohol-related crime and loss of productivity

• There is a significant relationship between drinking before age 13 and suicide attempts

Page 36: SOC 204 Goldberg Ch 6  Week 3

Underage Drinking

• High school students who engaged in binge drinking were six times more likely to drink and drive

▫ 7.2% of 8th-grade students binge drink

▫ 16.3% of 9th-grade students binge drink

▫ 23.2% of 12th-grade students binge drink

Page 37: SOC 204 Goldberg Ch 6  Week 3

Moderate alcohol drinkers have

lower rates of cardiovascular

disease than abstainers.

A.True

B.False

True

False

0%0%

Page 38: SOC 204 Goldberg Ch 6  Week 3

Physiological Toxicity

• Overdose

• Hangover

Page 39: SOC 204 Goldberg Ch 6  Week 3

When someone passes out from

alcohol use:

A. Put them on their back

B. Put them to bed and let them sleep it off

C. Put them on their side

Put them

on th

eir back

Put them

to b

ed and le

t...

Put them

on th

eir sid

e

0% 0%0%

Page 40: SOC 204 Goldberg Ch 6  Week 3

Fetal Alcohol Syndrome

Page 41: SOC 204 Goldberg Ch 6  Week 3

There is a safe level of alcohol to

consume while pregnant

A. True

B. False

True

False

0%0% Response

Page 42: SOC 204 Goldberg Ch 6  Week 3

Physiological

Toxicity - Brain• Wernicke-Korsakoff

syndrome develops because alcohol impedes the body’s ability to utilize thiamine (a B vitamin)

• Alcohol use is associated with psychological symptoms: depression, anxiety

Page 43: SOC 204 Goldberg Ch 6  Week 3

Physiological Toxicity - Liver

• Three main conditions associated with alcohol:

▫ Fatty liver

▫ Alcohol hepatitis

▫ Cirrhosis

• Cirrhosis is irreversible, even if alcohol use stops

Page 44: SOC 204 Goldberg Ch 6  Week 3

Physiological Toxicity – Digestive System

• In moderate amounts, alcohol aids digestion by increasing gastric juice in the stomach

• Too much alcohol can irritate the stomach, leading to internal bleeding

• Heavy alcohol use is implicated in acute pancreatitis

• Alcoholics often have malnutrition because alcohol interferes with the body’s ability to utilize nutrients

Page 45: SOC 204 Goldberg Ch 6  Week 3

Physiological Toxicity – Circulatory System

• Moderate alcohol use reduces risk of heart disease, boosts good (HDL) cholesterol and helps prevent type 2 diabetes

• Effects of heavy alcohol use:▫ Degeneration of the heart muscle▫ High blood pressure▫ Cardiac arrhythmias▫ Ischemic heart disease ▫ Strokes

Page 46: SOC 204 Goldberg Ch 6  Week 3

Physiological Toxicity – Immune System

• Studies show that moderate alcohol use reduces immunity

• Alcohol interferes with white blood cells, particularly T-lymphocytes, which help to resist infections

Page 47: SOC 204 Goldberg Ch 6  Week 3