| Papers [1-15] of 100 :: [Page 1 of 7] | | Go to page : 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 —> | Search results on "TEEN ALCOHOL DRUG ABUSE": |
|
|
Teen Alcohol and Drug Abuse, 2005. A look at the impact that peer pressure has on adolescent alcohol and drug abuse. 1,458 words (approx. 5.8 pages), 5 sources, MLA, $ 48.95 »
Click here to show/hide summary
Abstract This paper presents the case that peer pressure need not be negative when it comes to alcohol and drug use. It explains that, with the correct education in school and at home, youngsters could be positively influenced by their surroundings regarding choices made about drugs and alcohol.
From the Paper "During adolescence, peers play a large part in a young person's life and typically replace family as the center of a teen's social and leisure activities. But teenagers have various peer relationships, and they interact with many peer groups. Often "peer cultures" have very different values and norms. Thus, the adult perception of peers as a "united front of dangerous influence" is inaccurate. More often than not, peers reinforce family values, but they have the potential to encourage problem behaviors as well. Although the negative influence of peers is over-emphasized, more can be done to help teenagers experience the family and the peer group as mutually constructive environments. To accomplish this, families, communities, churches, schools, 4-H and other youth groups must work together (Haydock 45)."
| |
|
Preventing Teen Alcohol Abuse, 2006. A study on teenage alcohol abuse, its causes and what can be done to prevent teenage alcoholism. 2,781 words (approx. 11.1 pages), 35 sources, MLA, $ 83.95 »
Click here to show/hide summary
Abstract This research paper focuses on the problem of teenage alcohol abuse and what we can do to keep teenagers from abusing alcohol. The paper looks at a number of different aspects of the problem including the age children start drinking, why they start drinking, the relationship between crime and alcoholism, how widespread it is and whether it is an inherited disease. The paper then takes a look at what recommendations have been made that could help prevent teenage alcoholism.
Table of Contents
Age of First Use of Alcohol
Peer Pressure and Advertising
Teen Drinkers and Crime
Who Use Alcohol More Frequently Males or Females?
Teen Drinkers and Sex
How Widespread is Teen Age Alcoholism
What is the Real Cost of Teen Age Alcoholic Use?
How Many Teenagers are Treated for Alcoholism
Is Alcoholism Inherited?
What Can Be Done To Prevent Teen Age Alcohol Consumption?
From the Paper "According to Teenage Alcohol Use in South Carolina Some of South Carolina's young people start using alcohol as early as 10 or 11 years old, most begin around age 14 or 15. ) Beer is overwhelmingly the most popular kind of alcohol used by teenagers (especially young males) and all other age groups in South Carolina. Wine coolers and new malt liquor products have become popular recently among young females. These sweet and fruity drinks are marketed deliberately to young drinkers who typically don't like the taste of beer. Many teenagers don't realize that these products contain more alcohol than regular beer. "Alcohol Use Among Teenagers" says that Junior/middle and senior high school students drink 35% of all wine coolers sold in the United States; they also consume 1.1 billion cans of beer."
| |
|
Teens and Drug Abuse, 2004. This paper argues that teens today get involved with illegal drugs in many ways, but the main underlying cause is peer pressure. 840 words (approx. 3.4 pages), 6 sources, MLA, $ 29.95 »
Click here to show/hide summary
Abstract This paper explains that statistics show that if a teen makes it to age twenty-one without having tried drugs, that individual most likely will never try illegal drugs; but the problem is that peer pressure influences more to try drugs than it does not to try drugs. The author points out that peer pressure begins in toddlerhood; children look up to others to see what they should be doing or should not be doing. The paper relates that the most susceptible teens for illicit drug use are those teens that do not connect with their parents, school, or non-deviant peer groups.
From the Paper "Everyone in ?teen town? can be associated with one group or admonished for being in the wrong group. These groups exert peer pressure on both the members as well as the non-members. We know the smart teens called nerds, braincases, or the glee club. We also know the alienated teens known as the grits, metal heads, or burnouts. These pressure alliances and all of the peer groups that are in-between like the cheerleaders or jocks, influence through subtle acceptance pressure."
| |
|
Drug Abuse and Academic Performance, 2008. A study of the relationship between academic performance and drug abuse, and ways to prevent addiction. 2,700 words (approx. 10.8 pages), 8 sources, APA, $ 80.95 »
Click here to show/hide summary
Abstract This paper researches the connection between drug abuse and/or drug addiction and poor academic performance. The study is particularly concerned with the fact that increasingly younger age groups have become more susceptible to experimentation, abuse and addiction. The research is directed toward evaluating ways to resolve this problem by recognizing the visible negative indicators of drug abuse in children, adolescents and teens. The paper suggests that these particularly vulnerable demographics present a worthy starting point to preventing addiction rather than battling it. One of the key obstacles to preventing addiction is the lack of means by which to identify tell-tale signs early enough. The study concludes that there is sufficient reason to believe that academic indicators may be instructive in better identifying likely drug problems at a young age, both per individual and on a systemic level.
Table of Contents:
Introduction
Research Problem
Methodology
Findings
Discussion
Conclusion
From the Paper "One such consideration is the effect that familial drug exposure has on academic performance. There are almost universally accepted standards on our medical understanding of the potentially devastating physiological hazards of prenatal drug exposure to neurological development. This is accompanied by seriously impaired academic capacity, and often even developmentally delayed learning patterns. But there are also in this research, established connections between drug exposure after birth and the pursuit of academic opportunity, with researchers finding "the relationship between parental substance abuse and adolescent academic achievement easier to prove. In one provocative study, Schandler et al. (26) established a relationship between having a substance abusing parent and spatial learning deficits in adolescents." (Jeynes, 32) This is a meaningful finding in that establishes another layer in the relationship between drug abuse and academic performance as a systemic problem. This is revealing of the nature of drug abuse as being correlated to a complex combination of factors, all of which tend to share a reciprocal relationship rather than a cause and effect one."
| |
|
Teenage Drug Abuse, 2006. This paper reviews an article about licit and illicit drugs in relation to teens today. 675 words (approx. 2.7 pages), 1 source, $ 26.95 »
Click here to show/hide summary
Abstract The paper discusses a study that relates to the use of licit and illicit drugs and the affects that they have on teens and society. The paper describes how the study researchers contend that in regard to licit drugs, there is a growing concern for teens because licit drug abuse often leads to the abuse of illicit drugs. Furthermore, the study shows how licit and illicit drugs are closely connected to teenage suicides, with over 28,000 suicides reported annually.
From the Paper "While national statistics indicate that illicit drug use by teens has appeared to decline in recent years, the knowledge that many teens practice the abuse of licit drugs needs exploration, according to the researchers (Darboe, Keenan & Richards, 2002, sec. 1). This exploration was, therefore, conducted to determine whether theories of licit drug abuse had foundation in fact, or whether concerns regarding licit drug abuse are without merit."
| |
|
Juvenile Drug Abuse and Crime, 2001. This paper is a detailed discussion about the tremendous drug problems that affect adolescents and teens in the United States, and their link with serious crime. 4,095 words (approx. 16.4 pages), 7 sources, MLA, $ 110.95 »
Click here to show/hide summary
Abstract This paper is an in-depth look at drugs in America. The author uses a variety of sources to examine the problem of juvenile drug abuse and crime. The paper examines why teens abuse illegal substances such as marijuana, cocaine, as well as illicit substances: tobacco, alcohol, etc. The paper discusses how treatment programs for juveniles, within schools and within the juvenile justice and incarceration systems are particularly crucial in order to prevent adolescents from using drugs into their adult years.
From the Paper "The problem of juvenile drug abuse and the crime it has spawned are some of the most serious issues confronting our criminal justice system today. First of all, however, what is a drug? A drug may be said to be any substance taken to change an individual?s mental state or bodily functions. Sometimes, drugs are used to cure diseases. For example, penicillin is a drug that kills bacteria and cures infection. Sometimes drugs are used to ?improve? a normal body, such as a student having a cup of coffee so he or she can study longer for an exam or an individual taking a ?hit? of LSD to alter his or her consciousness. Other times, drugs are used to make a normal body abnormal, such as steroids that can increase the body?s ability to build muscle, or cocaine that can increase the body?s ability to stay awake and produce a feeling of euphoria."
| |
|
Adolescent Alcohol Abuse, 2004. This paper explores the treatment of alcohol abuse in adolescents in New Zealand. 3,714 words (approx. 14.9 pages), 21 sources, MLA, $ 102.95 »
Click here to show/hide summary
Abstract This paper examines how the impact of alcohol abuse by New Zealand adolescents is a complex puzzle affecting the individual, family and society as a whole. In New Zealand today, more adolescents are using and abusing alcohol more often and in larger amounts than ever before. The impact of this drinking by teens is reflected in the public health system and in New Zealand?s high schools. It seeks to explore the nature of alcohol abuse in adolescence and considers treatment and prevention issues for adolescents experiencing alcohol abuse. Where as there is broad range of treatment and prevention perspectives, the relationship of the family in treatment and prevention is the focus of this paper.
Outline
Adolescence and Alcohol Abuse
Treatment of Adolescents Who Abuse Alcohol
Prevention of Adolescents Who Abuse Alcohol
Conclusions
From the Paper "The use of alcohol during adolescence has unique significance. Adolescents may be defined on the basis of biological, psychosocial and statutory criteria. However the commonly held definition is people of the age 12 to 18 years being adolescent to young adult. The teen will be responding to pressure from peers as he or she attempts to find their place in their social group. Adolescence is a time of socially deviant behaviors and it is note worthy that the use of alcohol or other drugs may be part of the normal attempts to accomplish the developmental tasks of adolescents. This impacts on the complexity of assessment when attempting the find a view of the alcohol use within the murky web of adolescence."
| |
|
Alcohol Abuse in the over 65 Population, 2002. A discussion of the increase of alcohol abuse in the senior population. 1,815 words (approx. 7.3 pages), 6 sources, $ 58.95 »
Click here to show/hide summary
Abstract This paper discusses the problem of an increase of alcohol abuse among the over 65 segment of the population. The problems in identifying alcohol abuse in this group, as well as the consequences of the abuse are presented. The causes of abuse specific to the elderly population are explored.
From the Paper "Substance abuse, especially that of alcohol and prescription drugs, is increasingly growing into a serious problem among the population segment of 65 plus citizens. What is of grave concern is the fact that this particular segment of the population is the fastest growing. Census estimates predict that 1994's older adult population of 33 million will more than double to 80 million by 2050. Also consider the fact that several studies have found a clear relationship between early alcohol habits and the development of alcohol abuse later in life. Given that the use of alcohol has been more widespread since the 1960s, it is likely that the future will see a far larger incidence of alcohol abuse among the elderly with the ageing of the baby boomers (those born between 1946 and 1964)."
| |
|
Alcohol Abuse, 2002. An examination of the effects of alcohol abuse. 1,354 words (approx. 5.4 pages), 4 sources, MLA, $ 45.95 »
Click here to show/hide summary
Abstract This paper discusses the effects of alcohol for an alcoholic abuser, the abuser?s family and society in general. It looks at how the consumption of alcohol has become an integral part of modern society and an accepted part of social life and how for some, drinking alcohol is a pleasant activity and for others it is a dangerous activity. It shows how effects of alcohol abuse can be divided into three categories: health effects, psychological effects and lifestyle or social effects and evaluates each of these effects turn in. It looks at how alcohol is damaging to the liver, causes obesity and heart disease, causes psychological disorders and can lead to situations such as domestic violence.
From the Paper "This shows how the rage of the alcohol abuser impacts on family life and especially, the children involved. While this is focused on the children, it applies equally to other family members, including the husband or wife. The family learns to accept the violence and at the same time, to avoid having this rage taken out on them. In this way, the family begins to feel responsible for the rage. This shows how the alcohol abuser does not only damage themselves, but damages the people around them. The family becomes less able to live normally and instead, live in fear, waiting for the next alcoholic rage. The family are likely to develop their own set of psychological problems, based on their constant need to try to prevent the alcohol abuser becoming enraged."
| |
|
Child Abuse and Alcoholism, 2007. A study researching the incidence of alcoholism among abused individuals. 2,819 words (approx. 11.3 pages), 9 sources, MLA, $ 83.95 »
Click here to show/hide summary
Abstract The paper reviews relevant literature that explores the sociological roots of the problem of alcoholism caused by child abuse. The researcher traces the roots of child abuse and alcoholism individually, then links both concepts together to create a holistic view of the extent to which the incidence of child abuse influences the individual's propensity to resort to alcoholism. The paper reviews literature and identifies possible factors that are used as determinants for the study. The researcher plans a methodology that aims to generate data that reflects how indeed abuse of an individual, or an abused child, has negative repercussions upon reaching adulthood, by becoming addicted to alcohol drinking.
Outline:
Introduction
Review of Related Literature
Proposed Methodology
From the Paper "Contemporary society, at present, is ridden with social issues and problems that trace its roots from other social problems as well. One of the most prevalent problem society is facing today is the issue of child abuse, which pertains to both physical, verbal, and emotional abuse of an individual, specifically a minor, with age of 18 years or below. However, abuse among adults also predominates, but what makes child abuse a greater challenge as a social problem is that it involves individuals who do not know how to fight against their abusers; they do not even know the rights that they have as individuals."
| |
|
Alcohol and Drug Abuse, 2002. A look at the affects of alcohol and drug abuse on society. 2,650 words (approx. 10.6 pages), 6 sources, $ 97.95 »
Click here to show/hide summary
Abstract This paper discusses one of the biggest issues in society, which is the Alcohol and Drug-abuse. The paper discusses the issues related to alcohol and drug abuse. It explores the disadvantages of making alcohol and drugs as a part of ones life. It also includes how this problem is spreading all over the world.
| |
|
Alcohol Abuse, 2007. This paper discusses the causes and effects of alcohol abuse. 1,245 words (approx. 5.0 pages), 3 sources, MLA, $ 42.95 »
Click here to show/hide summary
Abstract The paper reveals the early symptoms of alcohol abuse and the short term effects of alcohol abuse, which include dehydration, a loss of short term memory and poor coordination. The paper discusses how drinking too much can cause serious physical damage and even cause death. The paper also looks at the emotional consequences that include addiction, depression and anxiety.
From the Paper "Alcohol is everywhere in today's society. People stop by for a drink, drink to get drunk, college students binge drink, and for many people it is a disease and an addiction. But alcohol has lasting consequences on one's mind and the body, and these consequences are overwhelmingly bad. Alcohol damages the brain, the body, and one's mind to the point that someone can be addicted. The causes of alcohol damage are often medical certainties, and the extended abuse of alcohol can lead to further psychological problem."
| |
|
Drug and Alcohol Abuse, 2004. This paper discusses the devastating impact of drug and alcohol abuse on families and community. 1,330 words (approx. 5.3 pages), 7 sources, APA, $ 44.95 »
Click here to show/hide summary
Abstract This paper explains that one of the more serious effects of drug and alcohol abuse is the phenomena of co-dependence; others members may resort to drug and alcohol consumption to relieve stress, and this may lead to the spread of this disease in the whole family. The author points out that children in such families are more seriously affected than adults because of the children?s inability to comprehend the situation or cope with it. The paper stresses that drug and alcohol addiction can have negative impact on the community as well, as illustrated by the well-documented correlation between addiction and increased criminal behavior.
From the Paper "Children may even begin holding themselves responsible for drug abuse within the family. This is because the child is cognitively unable to make sense of the situation and thus he loses self-esteem, becomes socially isolated, and develops feelings of intense guilt and shame. Children in affected families exhibit poor academic performance, social isolation, psychological and emotional problems etc. Disintegration of family unit and increased domestic violence has also been found to result from the presence of a drug addict within the family. Research found that children with a drug addict parent are likely to take over as parent to fill the vacant space in the family unit. Drug addicts usually shun their important responsibilities as parents, which results in children taking on the role of a responsible adult. However, this can be detrimental in the long run when these children become parents themselves. The research found that such children might abandon their own families once they become parents."
| |
|
Drug/Alcohol Use and Abuse, 2004. This paper looks at drug and alcohol use and abuse in America. 1,125 words (approx. 4.5 pages), 5 sources, $ 39.95 »
Click here to show/hide summary
Abstract This paper looks at drug and alcohol use and abuse in America, and the barriers to obtaining treatment for addicts. The writer cites the latest statistics (2003) on drug and alcohol use in the U.S. The writer also refers to some studies which try to explain why people do not seek treatment.
From the Paper "Drugs and alcohol are major problems in the United States particularly among the youth of this country ... "
| |
|
Women, Domestic Violence and Alcohol Abuse, 2008. This paper explores how a sociological perspective can help women who are victims of domestic violence and alcohol abuse. 1,318 words (approx. 5.3 pages), 9 sources, MLA, $ 44.95 »
Click here to show/hide summary
Abstract The paper discusses how many women in our society are abused in the domestic sphere, as well as suffer from a dependency on alcohol. The paper highlights how social institutions need to change in order for women to start having a greater sense of their own identity. The paper explains that this would be directly connected to lowering the chances of women being victims of domestic abuse and becoming dependent on drugs and alcohol.
From the Paper "Today, many women in our society are abused in the domestic sphere, as well as suffer from a dependency on alcohol. For instance, one third of all alcoholics are women. In this context, it is important to point out that alcoholism has traditionally been seen as a greater shame for women than for men. Indeed, in the past, most women were in the home and that is why alcoholism was less likely to be identified in women. But overall, women were perceived to be more "moral" than men, and they were held up to a higher ideal. It is important to understand this cultural aspect, since it leads us to understand how a sociological perspective can ultimately help women who are victims of domestic violence and alcohol abuse."
|
|
|