The Harmful Effects of Drugs and Alcohol

Andy IT

Andy
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Untitled.png The fact that drugs and alcohol can negatively impact your life should not come as a surprise. Even though it can be challenging to picture, abusing these drugs can have a significant impact on everything from your body to your monetary account. This can range from changed brain chemistry to health concerns, infections, troubles with the law, money problems, accidents, and even death. You may be aware of these negative consequences of drug abuse, but how much do you actually understand? Knowing the entire range of effects that these substances can have on you could improve your life. You might believe that your drug use is harmless or that your drinking is "just for fun," but this is usually untrue.

Mental Chemistry - The most intricate organ in the human body is the brain. It may only weigh a little more than three pounds, but it magically regulates both your thoughts and the bodily functions that keep you alive. Alcohol and drugs disrupt the molecules in your body that maintain your brain functioning properly, which alters how you feel. Let's explore the scientific basis of things. When you use drugs for the first time, your brain releases a substance called dopamine that gives you a euphoric feeling and makes you crave more of the drug. After all, wanting more of something that makes you feel good is only normal, right? Your mind becomes accustomed to the additional dopamine over time to the point that you can't operate normally without it. Your personality, memories, and biological functions that you might currently take for granted will all start to change.

Complications in health - The use of drugs and alcohol has an effect on almost every organ in your body, including your heart and bowels. Injecting substances can cause collapsed veins and infections in your heart valves, and substance misuse can cause irregular heart rhythms and heart attacks. A number of medications can also prevent your bones from developing normally, while others cause extreme muscle cramps and general weakness. Drug abuse over a lengthy period of time might eventually harm your liver and kidneys.

Infections - When you're high on drugs or alcohol, you could forget to use safe sex techniques. The likelihood of developing an STD rises when unprotected intercourse is engaged in. Sharing injection needles can expose you to viruses like hepatitis C, hepatitis B, and HIV. Sharing pipes and bongs can also spread common colds, the flu, and mono.

Legal Repercussions - A lifetime of dealing with the legal repercussions of drug and alcohol abuse is possible, in addition to the detrimental long-term impacts on your health. Before hiring you, many employers demand that you submit to a drug test; many of them continue to do so at random even after you start working for them. Refusing to stop using drugs could lead to unemployment, which has further problems. Driving while intoxicated can result in a suspended driver's licence, typically for 6 months to 2 years. Additionally, you'll have to pay hefty fines and might even go to jail for a while.

Financial difficulties - Alcohol and drugs are expensive, especially if you use them frequently and heavily. Your productivity and achievement at work and in school are both impacted by substance misuse. Learning new skills to further your profession is a better use of the time that might otherwise be spent looking for, using, and recovering from drugs. Your expenses will also go up due to the legal difficulties associated with drug use. You can see a rise in the cost of your health and auto insurance, as well as an increase in the cost of arrest warrants, DUIs, and legal representation.

Accidents and Death - You are more likely to sustain physical harm or be involved in auto accidents if you consume drugs and alcohol. Even worse, your risk of dying by suicide as well as homicide has increased. Since the early 1980s, the number of drug-related deaths has doubled. Each year, alcohol especially causes 1.8 million fatalities and 5.2 million accidents. According to the World Health Organization, drugs and alcohol are thought to be the cause of one out of every four fatalities.
 
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