Every year more than 70% of all substance related deaths are associated with this
What is smoking?
The act of stopping something from happening; delaying the onset of use; to prevent
What is Prevention?
Often presents itself as psychoses, extreme paranoia, trouble breathing, highly intense or aggressive behavior or seizure
What is a Meth Amphetamine overdose?
True or False
A person can become addicted after just one use
False
True or False
A person can die the first time they use a substance.
True
The addictive chemical found in tobacco
What is Nicotine?
What is 25 or 26?
Can come in powder, pill, or crystal-like forms and can be smoked, snorted, ingested or injected
What is Meth-Amphetamine?
A compulsive or obsessive need for and seeking out of habit-forming substance, characterized by craving, tolerance and withdrawal
What is Addiction?
Yes or No
Can legal substances be useful and helpful if properly used?
Yes
True or False
Vaping is safer than cigarettes
False
A coping mechanism, self-medication, escape and peer pressure are examples of
The most widely used stimulant substance in the world, 80% of the adult population consumes it
What is Caffeine?
Initial use, Social use, Abuse, Dependence, Addiction, Relapse
What is the Cycle of Addiction?
Often referred to as a moral failing, substance use disorder is considered a ____________.
What is Disease?
True or False
Having a smoke or hit off of a vape/e-cig when you feel nervous can calm you down
False
Any substance that causes a change in the brain when consumed
What is a drug?
What is ADHD
True or False
Addiction can not be cure.
True
Drug can have negative ____________ in every aspect of one's life, including school, work, home and relationships.
Consequences
Nicotine belongs to this class of substances
What are Stimulants?
The four major classes of substances
What are Stimulants, Depressants, Hallucinogens, and Inhalants
_____________ are the most widely used psychoactive substance in the world.
What are Stimulants?
________ ________ ___ ________ describes an addiction as a disease with biological, neurological, genetic and environmental sources of origin.
What is the Disease Model of Addiction?
What is Death?