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Addiction Lecture Notes (slides and class) - ENGLISH

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Lecture notes of the Clinical Psychology Master course Addiction (4.1). Includes slides and notes taken during class. Does not include book chapters or papers.

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Addiction lecture notes and slides

Week 1

Lecture 1: Introduction

What is addiction?​
The psychology behind addiction has more similarities that differences
-​ Example: smoking cigarettes and taking heroin have similar mechanisms

Why is it important to study addiction?
-​ 4 of the main reasons for death worldwide are addiction (smoking, alcohol, drugs)
-​ Opioid crisis in USA: average 115 opioid deaths each day → largest cause of death in
men under 30
-​ Over 3 million annual deaths due to alcohol and drug use (majorly men)
-​ Americans lose 119 billion through gambling each year
-​ Addiction is one of the 3 most common mental disorders in Europe

Lifetime prevalence Netherlands (DSM-V):
-​ Any mood disorders - 20.2
-​ Any anxiety disorders - 19.6
-​ Any SUD - 19.1% (1 in 5)
-​ Not all in treatment

Gender differences in prevalence: 80% of the population in treatment are men

Societal relevance of SU:
-​ Impact on health: health care, morbidity, mortality
-​ Relationships with crime: 50% of crimes are substance related
-​ Impact on public safety: driving, chemical waste
-​ Impact on work-related productivity

Is it a real disorder?
Some believe people with substance abuse disorders just have weak will, researchers say it is a
brain disease
-​ Medical approach (brain scans) advances the research

It is regarded by most psychologists and psychiatrists as one of the most prevalent disorders
(DSM-V)

DSM-V: must display at least 2 of the 11 symptoms within 12 months:
1.​ Taking the substance in large amounts or for longer than meant to
2.​ Wanting to cut down or stop, but not managing to
3.​ Spending a lot of time getting, using or recovering from use

, 4.​ Craving to use the substance
5.​ Not managing to do what you should at work, home or school, because of the SU
6.​ Continuing to use, even when it causes problems in relationships
7.​ Giving up important social, occupational or recreational activities because of SU
8.​ Using substances again and again, even when it puts you in danger (drunk
driving)
9.​ Continuing to use, even when 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

Not everyone will get addicted: most people don’t develop SU disorder
Ever used SU disorder

Cigarettes 76% 32%

Heroin 2% 23%

Cocaine 16% 17%

Alcohol 92% 15%

Amphetamines 15% 11%

Cannabis 46% 9%
Of the people who used it at least once

Addiction and SU cannot be understood apart from the social and historical context
-​ Prohibition of alcohol
-​ Legalization of cannabis
-​ Cocaine and amphetamine stocks in the Netherlands

Types of substances:
-​ Tobacco (cigarettes)
-​ Stimulants (cocaine, amphetamines, ecstasy)
-​ Depressants (alcohol, benzodiazepines)
-​ Opioids (heroin, prescription drugs)
-​ Hallucinogens (LSD, cannabis, ketamine)

Neurotransmitters: about 80 chemical substances that provide communication between cells

Synapses
-​ Drugs release more dopamine in the synapse and release more dopamine in the brain
-​ The neurotransmitters are “cleaned”
-​ Drugs inhibit the reuptake (more signal)

,Agonist: drugs that mimic the same response as the endogenous system
-​ Cocaine is a dopamine agonist because is stimulates the release of dopamine
-​ MDMA is a serotonin agonist because it increases its release and inhibits its
reuptake
Antagonists: bind to the same receptor sites as the neurotransmitter but they block the
response instead of initiating it

Alcohol is really complex in the brain (many neurotransmitters involved):
-​ GABA agonist
-​ NMDA antagonist
-​ Opioid agonist
-​ Serotonin agonist

Drugs and reputation
Risks: law vs public view
-​ Alcohol associated with good times

,

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Uploaded on
September 29, 2025
Number of pages
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Written in
2025/2026
Type
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Ingmar franken
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