effects on body
need to know facts
alcohol poisoning signs
alcohol abuse
true or false
100

Pregnant women are advised not to drink: why?

Alcohol can harm an unborn baby in various ways

100

How many shots is considered a standard drink?

about one shot

100

Will the amount of alcohol in your bloodstream (after passing out) stay the same or continue to rise?

Continue to rise.



100

Alcohol abuse is greatest among which of these age groups? (intervals of ten)

18- to 29-year-olds. 

100

Champagne makes you more drunk.

TRUE

200

__________ in the stomach will slow the absorption of alcohol into the bloodstream and delay impairment.

FOOD

200

Binge Drinking can be defined as ___ or more drinks in one 2 hour period for women and ____ or more drinks for men.

4,5

200

What has more alcohol inside it (proportionate glasses)? Beer, wine, or hard liquor?

They are all equal.

200

what are two things Alcohol-use disorder increases your risk for?

Alcohol-use disorder also increases your risk for type 2 diabetes, stroke, heart attack, falls, and accidental death. Alcohol-use disorder may also make depression worse and affect memory.


200

Energy drinks mask the effects of alcohol by giving you a sense of energy and the false sense that you are not that intoxicated.  

TRUE

300

What is the relationship between alcohol and the liver?

the liver helps remove alcohol from the blood. 

300

As a rule of thumb, the liver can process about how many standard drinks per hour?

1!

300

List three signs of alcohol poisoning:

- drinks excessively,
- does not respond to being talked to or shouted out; no physical movement
- irregular heartbeat, breathing pulse
- vomits when sleeping or passed out and does not wake up after
- bluish/purplish skin, skin becomes very flushed

300

What are the two main things that contribute to alcohol use and disorder?

A person who has a family history of alcohol-use disorder is at greater risk for abusing alcohol. But research shows that the genes are responsible for only half of the risk for alcohol-use disorder. Things in a person’s environment make up part of the remaining risk. So does the interaction of a person’s genes with their environment.


300

Taking a Cold shower, drinking coffee or going for a run will sober you up faster.

FALSE

400

What is the number one major effect alcohol has on your mental?

It is a major depressant

Alcohol is classified as a depressant because it slows, or depresses, basic functions such as speech, reactions, and movement. It also affects brain function and neural activity, impairing the ability to think clearly, altering perceptions of one's immediate surroundings, and distorting issues of judgment. 

400

Identify why alcohol is considered a drug.

Alcohol is considered a drug because it causes change in a person's physical and emotional state.

400

How long after ingestion does ethanol alcohol reach its peak concentration (10 min intervals)

20-60 min

400

What are some symptoms of alcohol-use disorders?

  • A strong craving for alcohol
  • A loss of control over how much alcohol is consumed at any one time and what the consequences of drinking are
  • Withdrawal symptoms such as tremor or nausea if alcohol is not consumed regularly
  • The need for more and more alcohol to feel good.
400

White wine won't get me as drunk as red

FALSE

500

Identify two out of the three long-term effects of alcohol.

 dead brain cells
stomach bleeding
irregular heart beat

500

identify the three major reasons intoxication may lead to death?

intoxication increases the risk of the death from motor vehicle crashes, alcohol overdose, and interactions of alcohol with other drugs.

500

Long-term effects on the stomach?

Ulcers in stomach lining, stomach cancer

500

What are 5 out of the 11 main characteristics of substance abuse?

  1. Taking the substance in larger amounts or for longer than you're meant to
  2. Wanting to cut down or stop using the substance but not managing to
  3. Spending a lot of time getting, using, or recovering from use of the substance
  4. Cravings and urges to use the substance
  5. Not managing to do what you should at work, home, or school because of substance use
  6. Continuing to use, even when it causes problems in relationships
  7. Giving up important social, occupational, or recreational activities because of substance use
  8. Using substances again and again, even when it puts you in danger
  9. Continuing to use, even when you know you have a physical or psychological problem that could have been caused or made worse by the substance
  10. Needing more of the substance to get the effect you want (tolerance)
  11. Development of withdrawal symptoms, which can be relieved by taking more of the substance
500

Alcohol kills brain cells.

FALSE.

During the temperance movement, it was often said that alcohol could kill brain cells. Throughout the decades, this myth has persisted, but scientific research has shown that the moderate consumption of alcohol is associated with better cognitive skills and memory than abstaining from alcohol. In other words, moderate drinking actually improves thinking, reasoning and memory.