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Lecture notes 7PAYFADD; PSYCHOLOGY & NEUROSCIENCE OF ADDICTION Week 3, Special populations

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Detailed summary notes for week 3, special population series including addiction in women, LGBT+, homelessness and addiction, prisons and addiction, race and addiction and foetal alcohol spectrum. Module: 7PAYFADD; PSYCHOLOGY & NEUROSCIENCE OF ADDICTION at King's college London.

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Uploaded on
November 21, 2022
Number of pages
12
Written in
2021/2022
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Sally marlow and polly radcliffe
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W3 T1; Special Populations


Women


Alcohol
 Women have about half the rate of addiction of men and half the rate of alcohol
intake per week
 16-24 binge drink similar to men of that age, and older working women match men
also
 Women accelerate into dependence at a faster rate; for alcohol, metabolism is
different
 Women have smaller frames, lower proportion of water to fat and fewer enzymes
such as alcohol/aldehyde dehydrogenases
 Therefore, liver damage happens earlier at smaller doses and faster progression to
cirrhosis; 6-10 years for man vs 2-3 for woman
 Stopping drinking does not help the problem recede at this stage as it would in men


Other drugs
 Rapid progression with nicotine seen too and higher levels of craving when stopped
 Stopping smoking amplifies weight and self esteem issues; core at addiction in
women
 Opioids and stimulants have accelerated development of use as substance use often
in context of relationships (use influenced by partner, friends etc) and intimate
violence can be a factor too
 E.g. some opioid users that are women may go straight to IV use to relate to partner
or due to control




 Important to look at whether substance use started at a young age due to an abusive
adult, bad parents or experiences as this can link
 Substances are often coping strategies to self-medicate stress and help with self-
esteem for women much earlier than for men
 Shame and secrecy around alcohol is also common in women and may drink more
than peers think; many that go on to develop dependence have pre-morbid mental
health issues
 Stigma exists towards women with addiction; alcohol companies cater towards
young women and try to glamorise it

,  Single, separated or divorced women are more likely to develop substance
dependence
 Menstrual cycle can cause dysphoria, whereby some women try to cope with using
substances repetitively
 Women working in male dominated jobs often match men in after work drinking, but
being more isolated from other women can cause issues earlier on
 Many women stop substance use when pregnant or breastfeeding, even IV heroin;
natal services also exist to support women presenting with alcohol problems
 However, services should be extended into early years; many women slip back into
use after birth but fear getting help or telling someone as they might lose their
children


Women-only services
 Many women with addiction have past trauma, criminal history, social services; lack
of belief in yourself
 Amy’s place and nelson trust are some spaces; many women are reluctant to come
at first and feel they are singled out but being in a woman only space can give the
feeling of sisterhood and be an asset
 The number of women that would seek help increased after opening of woman only
unit
 Women tend to show more complex needs in addiction; 1 in 3 women have been
sexually attacked, 1 in 4 experienced domestic abuse
 In addiction services, those numbers can be 80-100%
 Women services can provide family flats so children could come and visit
 These services give increased awareness of women needs and improved treatment


 Since 1970, women have expressed interest for same sex treatment
 Most treatment studies are done on men as more are in treatment and small
samples so little has been understood about women
 Getting women into an all-woman context can better our understanding of
treatment
 Women experience a lot more stigmatisation, particularly heroin use and those with
children; this is a barrier to treatment
 To deal with this, social services need to make women feel safer and more
supported in order to seek help; currently no one is the voice of the mother

 Higher rates of alcohol addiction seen in gay women; coming out issues, isolation,
identity issues; women are more prone to anxiety and depression, using alcohol for
self-medication
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