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What do we mean by alcoholism?
Is Alcoholism a Disease?
Is Alcoholism Inherited?
Can Alcoholism be cured?
How Can You Tell Whether You or Someone Close to You Has an Alcohol Problem?
Is It Safe to Drink During
Pregnancy?
What is FAS?
What are
the effects of prenatal alcohol on the foetus?
Can FAS be treated? How?
How much alcohol is dangerous? Is there anything I can do now to decrease
the chances of having a child with FAS?
Q:
What do we mean by alcoholism?
A:
Alcoholism, also known as "alcohol dependence," is a disease that includes
alcohol craving and continued drinking despite repeated alcohol-related
problems, such as losing a job or getting into trouble with the law. It
includes four symptoms:
-
Craving -- A strong need, or compulsion, to drink.
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Impaired control -- The inability to limit one's drinking on any given
occasion.
-
Physical dependence -- Withdrawal symptoms, such as nausea, sweating,
shakiness, and anxiety, when alcohol use is stopped after a period of
heavy drinking.
-
Tolerance -- The need for increasing amounts of alcohol in order to feel
its effects.
Q: Is
Alcoholism a Disease?
A: Yes. Alcoholism is a chronic,
often progressive disease with symptoms that include a strong need to drink
despite negative consequences, such as serious job or health problems. Like
many other diseases, it has a generally predictable course, has recognized
symptoms, and is influenced by both genetic and environmental factors that
are being increasingly well defined.
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Q: Is
Alcoholism Inherited?
A: Alcoholism tends to run in
families, and genetic factors partially explain this pattern. Currently,
researchers are on the way to finding the genes that influence vulnerability
to alcoholism. A person's environment, such as the influence of friends,
stress levels, and the ease of obtaining alcohol, also may influence
drinking and the development of alcoholism. Still other factors, such as
social support, may help to protect even high-risk people from alcohol
problems. Risk, however, is not destiny. A child of an alcoholic parent will
not automatically develop alcoholism. A person with no family history of
alcoholism can become alcohol dependent.
Q: Can
Alcoholism be cured?
A: Not yet. Alcoholism is a
treatable disease, and medication has also become available to help prevent
relapse, but a cure has not yet been found. This means that even if an
alcoholic has been sober for a long time and has regained health, he or she
may relapse and must continue to avoid all alcoholic beverages.
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Q: How
Can You Tell Whether You or Someone Close to You Has an Alcohol Problem?
A: A good first step is to answer
the brief questionnaire below, developed by Dr. John Ewing. (To help
remember these questions, note that the first letter of a key word in each
question spells "CAGE.")
Have you ever felt you should Cut
down on your drinking?
Have people Annoyed you by criticizing your drinking?
Have you ever felt bad or Guilty about your drinking?
Have you ever had a drink first thing in the morning to steady your nerves
or to get rid of a hangover (Eye opener)?
Three "yes" answers suggests a
probable alcohol problem. Four “yes” answers suggests a definite alcohol
dependence. If you think that you or someone you know might have an alcohol
problem, it is important to see a doctor or other health provider right
away. He or she can determine whether a drinking problem exists and, if so,
suggest the best course of action.
Q: Is
It Safe to Drink During Pregnancy?
A: No. Drinking during pregnancy
can have a number of harmful effects on the newborn, ranging from mental
retardation, organ abnormalities, and hyperactivity to learning and
behavioural problems. Moreover, many of these disorders last into adulthood.
While we don't yet know exactly how much alcohol is required to cause these
problems, we do know that they are 100-percent preventable if a woman does
not drink at all during pregnancy. Therefore, for women who are pregnant
or are trying to become pregnant, the safest course is to abstain from
alcohol.
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Q: What
is FAS?
A: FAS stands for Fetal Alcohol
Syndrome. FAS, a disorder characterized by growth retardation, facial
abnormalities, and central nervous system dysfunction (CNS), is caused by a
woman's use of alcohol during pregnancy.
Q: What
are the effects of prenatal alcohol on the fetus?
A: If a woman drinks while
pregnant, she puts her developing fetus at risk for a wide spectrum of
adverse effects including spontaneous abortion; growth retardation;
physical, mental, and behavioural abnormalities; facial abnormalities; and
CNS impairment, such as developmental delay, speech or language delay, lower
IQ, and decreased head circumference. In the worst cases, prenatal exposure
to alcohol may result in fetal death.
Q: Can
FAS be treated? How?
A: FAS is an irreversible, lifelong
condition that affects every aspect of a child's life and the lives of his
or her family members; however, FAS is the only birth defects that can be
completely prevented. With early identification and diagnosis, a child with
FAS can receive services that can help maximize his or her potential
Q: How
much alcohol is dangerous? Is there anything I can do now to decrease the
chances of having a child with FAS?
A: Any amount of alcohol consumed during pregnancy is
potentially dangerous to an unborn baby. There is no cure for FAS; it is
irreversible; however, if a pregnant woman is drinking during pregnancy, it
is never too late for her to stop.
The sooner a woman quits drinking, the better it will be for both her and
her baby. If a woman is not able to quit drinking, she should contact her
local social service agency or health plan for alcohol abuse treatment, if
needed; if a woman is not yet pregnant, she should use an effective form of
birth control until her drinking is under control. The easiest way to
prevent FAS is to abstain from alcohol use during pregnancy.
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