YOU WERE LOOKING FOR :Parent Substance Abuse and Effects on Their Children
Essays 31 - 60
so uncommunicative. 6. Interrupter It might be possible to build a relationship with this parent, but if that happens then...
In five pages this paper discusses the positive effects children receive when they have a parent or parents stay at home during th...
In seven pages this paper compares the differences between one and two parent households in order to determine the effects of a si...
There is a scale of addiction-on one side is complete abstinence, to abuse, to dependence, to addiction. It is very difficult to h...
feel their children are being treated unfairly, and this is the situation that sparked the fight in Boston. How should such incide...
equipment was very important to them. It needed to be safe and there needed to be a lot of it. These parents have read to their so...
the face of her addiction (Simon, 1994). No matter what he does its wrong "because of Alices defensiveness, which perceives concer...
clinicians rely on the DSM to diagnose their patients. It is credible insofar as it is published by the American Psychiatric Assoc...
Gastric metabolism is almost nonexistent for alcoholic women (Kilbourne, 1992; p. 4). Thus far, most research on alcoholism has ...
Poverty is widespread in rural counties without economic bases. There are also 625 counties in the US where poverty and wealth are...
the social costs." The remedy has been to treat the victims of alcohol abuse rather than to challenge the strong economic and poli...
It is approximately 6 to 13 percent now (PG). Some samples that have been seized are even higher. It takes less of the more pote...
In twelve pages this paper discusses psychological testing and its effects upon substance abuse in terms of diagnosis, prevention ...
of Revia is the potential for the drug to cause liver problems (Drugstore.com, 2003a). Consequently patients who have existing l...
In six pages the relationship between substance abuse, particularly heroin, and AIDS is discussed and AIDS' effects on intravenous...
missing the fundamental basics of human life; as such, a legal shift in focus took place in order to provide them with more emphas...
what protects children who are exposed to abuse (Martin, 2002). The article begins with a formal definition of domestic violence...
In fifteen pages alcoholism is examined in terms of its effect on children with a current literature review featured in this resea...
Most programs intended to stop teenagers from using and abusing substances fail because the teenager does not want to be there and...
found that they couldnt keep up the payments and defaulted on the loan. In many cases, they were brought into the home buyers mark...
the 9/11 terrorist attacks; that included 100 infants born after the event (Patterson. 2006). Professionals who have worked with ...
(Jacobs, 1997). It was founded by the Quakers and came about because of the concern regarding the conditions of the prisons (Jacob...
This paper is an evaluation of Restoration House's New Hope for Families program, which is a community-based residential treatmen...
This paper first describes 2 cases of abuse, one that pertains to elder abuse and the other to child sexual abuse. Then, the write...
This paper pertains to domestic violence and its negative effects on child witnesses. The writer considers the issue of whether w...
In a paper consisting of ten pages the impact of parental alcohol abuse upon adolescent children's behavior and effects upon their...
to real-world violence, and thereby less empathetic to the pain and suffering of others (Chidley 37). Observations of teenagers re...
abuse; depression, or post- traumatic stress syndrome. It is not necessary to diagnose your parent. Alcohol disrupts the consisten...
children of alcoholics are more likely to experiment with alcohol at earlier ages than other children (Vail-Smith and Knight, 1994...
In twelve pages this paper examines how juvenile delinquency and domestic violence increases are affected by substance abuse in th...