YOU WERE LOOKING FOR :Familial Substance and Physical Abuse
Essays 31 - 60
want to hone in on specific types of examples such as substance abuse, because then it will be easier to convey how social influen...
person can keep his or her employment (SAMHSA, 2004). The good news is that there are several programs that integrate subs...
be gay, they are unaware of some of the issues that might be impacting this particular community, and this could have a definite o...
to their addiction (Excerpt from the BSW, 2004). Addicted patients are often "highly resistant to therapy" and "skilled in making...
in detail the physical environment of the clinic, office or other facility he visited. The setting for treatment of substance abu...
substance abuse among medical professionals. Discussion Hines defines...
media campaign and treatment received the least (32 percent), (Drug Policy Foundation [DPF], 2000; ONDCP, 2000). A RAND study indi...
after a period of detoxification passed, the teens began to reconsider this position and reconsider their past lives. From retra...
and poverty has been established for many years, and it may be argued that it is the less well-off social classes children will al...
many motivated families waiting for help; the resistant families will call back when they finally feel the need; there is no need ...
that "as a consequence of their illness they may find themselves living in marginal neighborhoods where drug use prevails" (Hatfie...
the increased propensity of our nations youth to use drugs can be traced back to the same root reasons as the other problems which...
to hire a lawyer. This is true even when police use illegal tactics to secure an arrest. Certainly, there are tax implications an...
the Catholic Church and in work communities. Juans mother, Marianna, lives a block away and spends time with the children after s...
Not only are the direct health impacts to the nurse deleterious, impaired nurses cannot meet their responsibility to provide top q...
sometimes an individuals perceived reality can hinder his or her ability to see things as they truly are, which then requires the ...
(Jacobs, 1997). It was founded by the Quakers and came about because of the concern regarding the conditions of the prisons (Jacob...
eligibility is determined by age and health status. Implementation difficulties reflect the perpetual absence of adequate funding...
From this perspective, we can see...
Disorders (DSM-IV) of the American Psychiatric Association outlines the criteria for making a diagnosis of ADHD (Wilens, 1998). Ac...
of Revia is the potential for the drug to cause liver problems (Drugstore.com, 2003a). Consequently patients who have existing l...
always be an integral component to society. It can readily be argued that how impact Prohibition had upon social change was both ...
because programs at companies that combine substance abuse education and support, along with testing, tend to have far better resu...
think, to work on this area. For example, a counselor discovers that because of a childhood trauma, she has an unreasonable dislik...
community of substance abusers who are empowered to support each other through the process (Johnson, 1993). As a result, the alco...
ones life when one experiences an abundance of hostility from external sources, it is during ones formative teenage years; as such...
with medications which offer help in suppressing the craving and withdrawal symptoms associated with blocking the effects of the d...
a biological entity" (Coser, 1977, p. 129). These factors which are external to the individual outlast individuals who die over ti...
would relapse into drug use within the first three months after completion. More than likely, the number would be closer to 8 out ...
has been stable at about 12 percent of the total population for decades, but it is now growing through immigration. The fastest-g...