Remember Me
forgot your password?

Alcohol Use, Abuse, Dependence, and Addiction

There are many types of alcohol consumption ranging from the healthy to the deadly. Some people of the prohibitionist persuasion will ague that any use is destructive, but neither medical research nor personal experience supports that conclusion. Unhappily, most "screening" protocols are heavily weighted towards a diagnosis of addiction justifying punitive treatment approaches and "abstinence only" outcomes. In reality, many different degrees of alcohol use exist, and the following thumbnail guide can be helpful in deciding what category is appropriate, and in predicating various – as well as usual - outcomes.

Healthy alcohol consumption has been found to be approximately two drinks of distilled spirits, two bottles of beer, or one half bottle of wine per day for an adult man, and half that for an adult women. These amounts confer the most health benefits without any associated detrimental effects. Obviously, not everyone consumes these set amounts, nor do most people who drink necessarily always stop at one or two. Certain social settings may find one consuming more over the duration of an event, for example, but the average should remain within the recommended parameters.

People who clearly fall into this category may, unfortunately, still find themselves in need of help. Particularly in child custody disputes, but in other legal matters as well, unfounded accusations are frequently hurled and difficult to refute. As John Donne noted, "Two things will be believed of any man whatsoever, and one is that he has taken to drink."

Alcohol abuse is defined as consumption which consistently exceeds the recommended levels and/or is done in isolation rather than socially. Frequent contributing factors include loneliness, exhaustion, and a paucity of peers or activities. At this stage, remediation is common enough to be the norm, with a return to healthy use the usual outcome. Counseling may expedite the process and help with the underlying causes.

Clients who find themselves at this level can usually benefit from a process of assessment, skill building through Cognitive-Behavioral Therapy (CBT), and the adoption of non-alcohol related activities. As in more serious conditions to follow, the key lies in the creation of a life with reduced alcohol use that is more satisfactory than the current one. An onerous life, or a continued focus on alcohol, will nearly guarantee a return to misuse.

Alcohol dependence occurs after long periods of excessive use leading to social, physical, and emotional dependence. Drinking becomes a primary coping mechanism across multiple categories; for example, socially, recreationally, vocationally, and spiritually. Symptoms may include physical withdrawal following cessation, depression, increased isolation, significant weight gain, decreased liver function, and possible legal, financial, and/or employment problems. As multiple problems need attention, counseling can help with the reorganization, prioritization, and systematic accomplishment of necessary changes.

While a return to moderate or healthy use is normal, a period of abstinence, possibly one to two years, is recommended. Many people who do this never return to drinking at all, having successfully modified their lives in satisfactory ways.

Alcohol addiction, or alcoholism, results when a person's physical, emotional, and psychological being is permeated by alcohol and its consumption. Distinct withdrawal symptoms – physical (i.e. tremors, seizures) and psychological ones (i.e. blackouts) – are present and alcohol related disintegration in several areas of life (i.e. financial, legal, vocational, marital, recreational, social, medical) is present. While approximately a third of diagnosed alcoholics return to moderate drinking, this is not generally recommended.

At this stage both medical and counseling help is usually necessary given the physical, social, emotional, and psychological aspects. Recovery prospects are uncertain at best and outcomes vary. As always, motivation, spousal support, and a belief in personal efficacy, as opposed to "powerlessness," are the primary factors in success.

In general, alcohol problems of all magnitude are remarkable for both their persistence over time (being stabile rather than progressive) and their frequent spontaneous remission. While some individuals do follow a path from use to abuse to dependence to addiction, and death, they are the exception, not the rule.

Mary Barnes

Mary Ellen Barnes, Ph.D., is a therapist with offices in Rolling Hills Estates who approaches all clients as unique individuals capable of overcoming difficulties through the development and redirection. Mary Ellen can be contacted through her profile here: Good Therapy / Therapist Lake Oswego

Rate this Article: 0 / 5 stars - 0 vote(s)
Print Email Re-Publish

Add new Comment



Captcha

  • Latest Psychology Articles
  • More from Mary Barnes

How to Have a Positive Mental Attitude

By: paul hargreaves | 18/12/2009
Having a positive attitude is one of the most effective ways of improving your approach to life and appearance. Here we discuss this in more detail.

Become more masculine: Masculine Affirmations

By: Phillip J. Reeves | 17/12/2009
In our patriarchal society, masculinity, no matter how we look at it and no matter how we feel about it, is highly revered. Aggression, courage, taking action, i.e. attributes that move society forward, are still associated to a great degree, with masculinity.

Conversational Hypnosis and Milton Erickson: What Was His Technique?

By: Shane | 16/12/2009
Conversational hypnosis was a concept largely devised and attributed to an American psychiatrist by the name of Milton Erickson. Erickson founded the American Society for Clinical Hypnosis and was best known for his theories concerning the unconscious mind and how it is susceptible to suggestion in ways that our conscious minds are not.

How to reduce Abdomen Fat

By: Owen Linnen | 15/12/2009
Want to know what you should be consuming to cut belly fat, lose wieight and get six pack abs? Lucky I'm going to tell you.

Psychology Career Interview Tips

By: Helping Psychology | 15/12/2009
Interview tips may relieve recent psychology graduates that are anxious about interviewing for jobs. While a student’s grades may be stellar and extra-curricular activities may be numerous, the market can be tough and a successful interview is the one conduit to getting an actual job. But it is possible to have a leg-up on other candidates in the psychology field by preparing for the interview in advance, utilizing interview tips and learning how to shine on a job interview.

Hypnotic Rapport in Hypnosis

By: Shane | 14/12/2009
Successful hypnosis depends on a variety of things, but probably the single most important among them is rapport. To support a good relationship between hypnotist and subject, wide rapport must be established. Rapport isn't something that happens exclusively in hypnosis; every time you come into conversational contact with someone, rapport is established on some level. The type of rapport you develop with subjects is the key to conducting successful conversational hypnosis.

Everybody Gets Down At Times...Successful People Don't Stay Down!

By: Pete Brand | 14/12/2009
I work very hard to maintain a positive attitude and a positive outlook on life. The longer I’ve focused on this, sometimes elusive goal, the easier it has become to maintain a positive outlook on my life and the challenges I am faced with. Although it has gotten easier with time, it can still be difficult.

How To Improve Short Term Memory and IQ

By: Alan Boyer | 14/12/2009
General intelligence depends on working memory because working memory affects a wide range of complex cognitive tasks involving reasoning problem solving, and making sense of things. We use working memory when we reason, plan and problem solve.

Alcohol Use, Abuse, Dependence, and Addiction

By: Mary Barnes | 05/10/2008 | Psychology
There are many types of alcohol consumption ranging from the healthy to the deadly. Some people of the prohibitionist persuasion will ague that any use is destructive, but neither medical research nor personal experience supports that conclusion. Unhappily, most "screening" protocols are heavily weighted towards a diagnosis of addiction justifying punitive treatment approaches and "abstinence only" outcomes

He Quit Drinking so Why Don't I Have My Husband Back?

By: Mary Barnes | 05/10/2008 | Marriage
It's a common, if quiet, complaint heard over lunch, or at breaks in meetings, at the Chamber of Commerce mixer, or the League of Women Voters retreat. "My husband finally quit drinking, attends AA, and life is certainly calmer, but…" The "buts" are varied, but essentially come down to the fact that while one's spouse is no longer actively drinking little else has changed.

Alcohol Abuse, Abstinence and Moderation - Aa and 12 Step Alternatives

By: Mary Barnes | 05/10/2008 | Psychology
No single idea keeps people from seeking help with their alcohol related problems as much as the mistaken belief that alcohol abuse, dependence, and addiction are always the symptoms of an actual "disease" and that there is only one "cure." However, just as everyone knows someone who currently has problems with alcohol, we also know someone whose problems seemed to disappear. How can a supposedly life-long, progressive, and fatal disease simply evaporate and not just occasionally, but often enou

Submit Your Articles Free: Signup
Article Categories




Use of this web site constitutes acceptance of the Terms Of Use and Privacy Policy | User published content is licensed under a Creative Commons License.
Copyright © 2005-2008 Free Articles by ArticlesBase.com, All rights reserved. (3.22, 6, w3)