YOU WERE LOOKING FOR :Substance Abusers and Harm Reduction Attitudes
Essays 1 - 30
media campaign and treatment received the least (32 percent), (Drug Policy Foundation [DPF], 2000; ONDCP, 2000). A RAND study indi...
the fact that there is not a single definition of harm reduction that can be applied in every situation, and harm reduction progra...
The Healthy People 2020 project reported that substance abuse in the United States has decreased but there are still more than 20 ...
In this paper, the writer reflects on the ethical issues associated with treating substance abusers and addiction. The paper cites...
This essay explains and discusses motivational interviewing and crisis intervention as approaches to persuade substance abusers to...
This paper first discusses the characteristics of abusers that engage in domestic violence and then discusses the role of substanc...
This paper pertains to therapies designed to aid substance abusers. Literature is surveyed and the writer concludes by offering an...
inability to regulate decision-making behavior at such times is critical if relapses are to be avoided (Matto, 2007). In addition,...
though the normal machinery of motivation is no longer functioning; they want the drug even when it no longer gives pleasure (Anon...
et al, 2005). However, smokers are not limited in their addition, those who are addicted to other substances, such as alcohol. For...
their families insist that there is a problem. The abusers rarely accept the fact that they have a problem. In light of this we fi...
In ten pages the writer probes the impacts of substance abuse on the abuser and others through a research study that includes a hy...
This paper assesses the pros and cons of publicly displaying pornographic materials and the harm such marketing can cause in 5 pag...
In seven pages this paper examines how the U.S. government can resolve the complex issue of pregnant addicts in a theoretical cons...
Alternatives, 2001). "Harm reduction" first arose in Great Britain, under the premise that use of illicit drugs should be ...
background, the points which Gray (2001) makes are surprising to say the least. Gray (2001) sees the war we as a society are wagi...
alcohol harm reduction and improvements in the health of the Aboriginal population the problem has to be understood and the key dr...
best way to reduce unwanted pregnancies and the spread of sexually transmitted diseases, abstinence from drugs is the best policy....
than before the treatment started. Obviously, the harm reduction is controversial in a world where the most acceptable paradigm is...
research shows that the majority of women, and also a percentage of men, who seek treatment for substance abuse disorders indicate...
The writer uses results gathered by the student to assess the ways in which small business may reduce waste and the attitudes towa...
of the work is involved with events as the ship sunk and after the sinking. It is titled Sunk and is comprised of chapters four th...
crackdown on veterans is the ballooning deficit, which is growing daily as the war in Iraq continues. Ironically, it is the veter...
the survivors accounts of the torpedoing of the Indianapolis by the Japanese on July 30 and the desperate efforts to survive that ...
sold to Africans and only rarely to Europeans" (Harms, 2003; 246). These particular slaves were often kept by the Africans if it w...
Ward & Friedman (2006) report, "Our findings suggest that TV use, in multiple forms, appears to be linked with adolescent sexualit...
women or does it primarily reflect a later change in attitude, which originates with the early Christian communitys perspective." ...
level, even working very long hours. They may have benefits, depending on the company, but they may depend on public transportatio...
trillion.6 The severe economic effects of this war in terms of costs that include war zone operations, troop deployment, equipmen...