Transcript DRUGS
What is a Drug?
› A drug is any substance
other than food that
changes a person’s physical
or psychological state.
Effect of Drugs on the Body
› Drugs can:
Alter(change) mood
Slow down reaction time
Impair thinking ability
Effect formation of memory
Distort judgment
Cause lung cancer & heart disease
Create problems with the law
What Is a Drug?
› Drugs do not provide the body with
any nutrients that are necessary for life.
› Drugs can be found in foods and
beverages as well.
› For example: ____________
Taking Drugs…
› Drugs can be taken
Orally (by mouth)
Chewing
Injection (by hypodermic needles)
Smoking
Inhaling (by breathing)
Transdermal patch
The Use of Drug as Medicine
› Many drugs are used as medicine.
› A medicine is a substance used to treat
disease, injury, or pain.
› Medicines can be obtained in two ways:
Prescription
Over the counter
Drug Abuse
Drug abuse is misusing a legal drug on
purpose or using any illegal drug.
Misuse of a drug involves taking too
much of the drug.
Drug Abuse
People abuse drugs for many
reasons:
They like how the drug makes them
feel
They feel the drug helps them perform
better
To escape their problems
What Is Addiction?
› Drug addiction is the uncontrollable use of a
drug even if it is harming a person’s health
and/or relationships.
› Dependency on a drug means needing the
drug in order to function properly.
› Withdrawal is the negative symptoms that
result when a drug-dependant person stops
using a drug.
Dependency
Physical dependency is the body’s chemical
need for a drug.
Stopping to use the drug will take the body into
withdrawal.
Psychological dependency is a person’s
emotional or mental need for drug.
Stopping to use the drug will cause craving for the
drug.
It is harder to overcome psychological dependency
than physical dependency.
The Consequences of Drug Abuse
Some problems related to drug
abuse:
–Problems with family and friends
–Problems at school
–Money problems
–Health problems
–Problems with the law
Types of Drugs
Drugs are classified as:
Stimulants (uppers)
Cocaine, crack cocaine,
methamphetamine,
Depressants (downers)
Alcohol, heroin, morphine,
Hallucinogens
PCP, LSD, mushroom,
Stimulants
› Stimulants are drugs that speed up the activities
of the body.
› Stimulants increase heart rate, blood
pressure, breathing rate, blood sugar level, and
tight blood vessels.
› All of these changes make the user feel more
awake and alert.
› Dangers of using stimulants include heart failure,
brain damage, and stroke.
› Caffeine, nicotine, cocaine, and
methamphetamine are examples of stimulants.
Depressants
› Depressants are drugs like tranquilizers that slow
down the body’s activities.
› Depressants reduce heart rate, blood
pressure, and breathing; causing the person to
feel relaxed, sleepy and slow.
› Depressants are extremely addictive and they can
cause heart failure, brain damage, and death.
› Alcohol, heroin, and pain killers such as Vicodin
and Methadone are examples of depressants.
› Narcotics like morphine, heroin and codeine are
depressants that relieve pain and dull the senses
Hallucinogens
› Hallucinogens are drugs that cause a person to
sense things that are not real or do not exist.
› The user may feel several emotions at once,
panic, or act dangerously.
› A long-term effect of hallucinogens is having a
sudden flashback of reliving the hallucinogen
experience (even months or years later).
› LSD, magic mushrooms and PCP are examples
of hallucinogens.
Marijuana
› Marijuana is the dried flowers of the Cannabis
plant. It has many street names like pot, grass,
weed, green, and Mary Jane.
› The active chemical in marijuana is THC.
› The effect of marijuana on a person depends on
the amount of THC the flower has in it.
› Major effects of marijuana are:
– Inability to focus
– Poor coordination
– Lack of motivation
– Slow reaction time
Alcohol
› Alcohol is a depressant drug.
› Alcohol is the oldest of all drugs.
› Is alcohol a legal drug?
› Short term effects include inhibiting the central
nervous system, making it difficult to operate
heavy machinery.
› Long term effects can be fatal and include
withdrawal – this can cause anxiety, seizures
and hallucinations.
Heroin
› Heroin is a drug that is semi-synthetic. It is
synthetically derived from morphine, which is a
painkiller created from the poppy plant.
› It is a downer drug that takes effect fastest with
a rush if it is injected into the blood.
› Withdrawal can begin within 6-24 hours and
include symptoms such as sweating, chills,
muscle and bone aches, vomiting, diarrhea,
cramps, anxiety and depression.
Cocaine
› A naturally occurring stimulant drug that
is found in the leaves of the coca plant.
› Cocaine increases alertness, feelings of
well-being, energy and motor activity.
› Anxiety, paranoia and restlessness are
some frequent side effects.
› Dependence may result in physical
damage, psychosis, depression and death.