Alcohol addiction or alcohol abuse is a disease in medicine called alcohol use disorder (AUD).
Alcohol is an affordable product, so its consumption is becoming widespread throughout the world. Despite certain restrictions on the use of alcohol, it is present in the life of every adult. In the United States, 15 million people are diagnosed with AUD.
Many people are sure that this problem does not concern them and that they drink alcohol in moderation. But the development of this confusion is quiet and the person does not realize that he/she got into the net of alcohol.
If you want to know if you have an alcohol addiction, then pay attention to your relationship with alcohol, and if you have at least three signs that the American Psychiatric Association (APA) considers signs of alcohol dependence, then you need help.
Signs of alcohol addiction or alcohol abuse.
- The dose of alcohol that you need to achieve intoxication has increased significantly during the year.
- Every time you want to drink more and more and you can’t control your desire.
- You are not happy without alcohol, so you do not attend events where you need to control the amount of alcohol or without it.
- If you recover hard after each case of drinking alcohol, but this does not stop you, and you drink again.
- You do not want to give up drinking alcohol despite health problems, relationships, and work because of it.
- You may skip work or not perform duties for alcohol.
After analyzing all the symptoms of AUD, you can see that this is a disease that does not only harm your physical health but also destroys all areas of your life.
AUD leads to negative consequences that can be avoided if you give up drinking.
Negative effects of AUD:
- Conflict with family members, friends, and colleagues.
- Job loss.
- Increased anxiety and depression.
- Insomnia.
- Destruction of the liver.
- Cancer of all organs.
- The destruction of immunity.
If you notice that you have some signs of AUD, you should consult a doctor who can diagnose or refute the presence of this disease. The doctor talks with you to ask specific questions about your lifestyle and make a diagnosis based on your answers. In some cases, the doctor may talk with your family members to confirm the diagnosis.
The complexity of this diagnostic method is the lie of some patients. As a rule, people who have problems with alcohol deny this. Therefore, the doctor is forced to use additional methods of establishing a diagnosis, such as talking with relatives and friends.
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