The Risk of Alcohol Consumption
Video Description: Learn about the risks of Alcohol consumption and it's links to elevating pancreatic cancer in this medical report. Related Article Subjects: The Risk of Alcohol Consumption, alcohol consumption risks, health care information, health information, health instruction, health research, insidermedicine, insidermedicine in 60, pancreatic cancer causes, pancreatic cancer risksThe Risk of Alcohol Consumption
The Risks of Alcohol Consumption for Women
Learn about the risks of Alcohol consumption for women in this medical... Health Care Insurance TipsBy: John Tahan | 18/05/2009 | InsuranceAmericans shopping for their own healthcare insurance can substantially cut premiums by following 10 simple steps, according to leading insurers. Alcohol against PancreasBy: Peter Melamed Lic.Ac,RN, Ph.D | 14/08/2009 | AddictionsEach year from 80,000 to 200.000 people in the U.S. are admitted to the hospitals with pancreatitis with mortality rates from 5 to 10 percent. After first attack of pancreatitis all people with alcohol abuse need the special comprehensive program to prevent of developing of chronic pancreatitis or future worsening of their conditions. One of the ways of detoxification is drinking at home healing mineral water made from the Genuine Karlovy Vary Thermal Spring Salt. Alcohol Goes to the Hair not Just the HeadBy: Avi Lasarow | 11/08/2007 | HealthDETECT YOUR CLIENT’S ALCOHOL LEVELS FOR UP TO 12 MONTHS The ability to test your client’s hair alcohol levels and gain a snapshot their alcoholic past is now made possible through the introduction of Hair Alcohol Testing in the UK. Recently launched by Trimega Laboratories Ltd in April 2007, this new method of testing has been adopted by numerous court, legal and family advocates across the UK. For the first time ever, there is a non-invasive method of establishing long-term excessive drinkin Health Benefits of the Male OrgasmBy: Paul Rodgers | 19/05/2008 | SexualitySo there you have it, people. It's plain to see that humans were meant to have sex often and to enjoy it a lot. The body and the mind suffer without the frequent combination of exertion and release brought by sex and orgasms. Liver Failure Treatment InformationBy: Juliet Cohen | 19/02/2008 | Diseases & ConditionsLiver is the main organ in the body. The liver has many jobs, including changing food into energy and cleaning alcohol and toxic substances in the blood. Is Alcoholics Anonymous Effective? Finally, Get the Real Facts Here FIRST Before Making ANY Treatment Plans for Yourself or Loved OneBy: Melanie Solomon | 28/05/2009 | AddictionsSolomon is quick to acknowledge the contribution AA has made to those it has helped but suggests the numbers are just too staggering not to explore alternatives for those not being served well by 12-step approaches. Only 5% of those who seek AA for help remain in the program after one year. So, if only about 5% of the people are getting the help that they need, what about the 95% of the people who are not being helped? That is the purpose of this article, to provide much needed awareness. Working Towards Good HealthBy: samreen Ali | 01/07/2009 | HealthHealth is a precious gift of God to mankind. When we observe in our surroundings, there are number of cases where people are devastating their health due to bad habits. There are several approaches that can be offered to people to correct their poor health habits. This article will describe four approaches that are educational appeal, fear appeal, modeling and stimulus control. Alcohol Use and Abuse Addiction and HabituationBy: Dr.Kedar Karki | 28/01/2008 | Wines & SpiritsSummary: Although there is no definition of "addiction" that is universally accepted, in general, addiction refers to a physiological and psychological dependency on a drug. While some drugs of abuse induce physiological addiction, others do not. Alternatively, some drugs that are physiologically addictive generally are not abused (e.g., caffeine). Tolerance to drug effects, and withdrawal symptoms upon abrupt cessation of use, which develop over time, are characteristic features of physiological addiction. "Habituation" is the term used to refer to psychological dependence on a drug. Some drugs of abuse are highly rewarding because of their influence on reinforcing neurobiological processes, but they do not necessarily result in "tissue" related withdrawal symptoms. Cessation of such drugs may lead primarily to subjective craving due to previous drug conditioning (perhaps true of some marijuana users) and craving may be more readily evoked or deeply conditioned among some persons than others ("addictive personalities"). Primary methods of assessment of addiction and habituation are completed through clinical interviews or self-report surveys (e.g., American Psychiatric Association DSM-IV, World Health Organization ICD-10). Treatment paradigms for the cessation of addiction begin with initial detoxification or withdrawal, followed by inpatient or outpatient program participation (e.g., 12-step programs, milieu, cognitive-behavioral, or behavioral). Pharmacological efforts (e.g., methadone maintenance) may be used as harm-reduction strategies among those who seem unable to quit drug use.
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