Test Bank for Drugs Behaviour and Society 4/E Hebb
Test Bank for Drugs Behaviour and Society 4/E Hebb 1) What were the questions who, what, why, when, where, how, and how much introduced to do? A) Understand the dependence potential of a drug. B) Help us evaluate whether a particular type of drug use is a problem. C) Determine the toxicity of a drug. D) Track arrest data for drug law violations. 2) If a substance is consistently used in a particular kind of situations (e.g., at parties, as opposed to when one is alone), what can it help us understand? A) The amount of the substance being used. B) The type of substance being used. C) The reason the substance is being used. D) Who is using the substance? 3) After reading the opening content of your textbook if you read an article that stated Indigenous South Americans who chew coca leaves absorb cocaine slowly over a long period. What investigative question has been introduced? A) How long the drug has been taken. B) How much of the drug has been taken. C) Where the drug has been taken. D) How the drug was taken. 4) The media has been reporting on drug use ranging from methamphetamine to ecstasy to glue sniffing. How have these various examples been described in the media? A) The "drug du jour" B) Drug use: a laissez-faire reality C) Drugs that are always bad drugs D) Drug use by celebrities 5) What did a 2019 survey of high school students in Ontario reveal regarding the use of ecstasy in the previous 12-month period? A) Less than 1% of the students self-reported using ecstasy B) 2.3% of the students self-reported using ecstasy C) 5.4% of the students self-reported using ecstasy D) 15.4% of the students self-reported using ecstasy 6) According to your textbook in the mid-1980s, was the "drug du jour? A) alcohol shots B) crack cocaine C) marijuana D) speed 7) A survey completed regarding drug use and Aboriginals living on reserves in Canada reported that most youth who tried solvents did so by which age? A) ten years B) eleven years C) thirteen years D) fourteen years 8) How a drug exists is an important fact to consider. For instance, compared to smoking cocaine in the form of "crack", how will Indigenous South Americans who chew coca leaves absorb cocaine? A) Quickly over a short period of time. B) Slowly over a short period of time. C) Slowly over a long period. D) Quickly and continuously over a long period. 9) All of the following EXCEPT which one, are examples of harm reduction measures reflected in Canada's Drug Strategy, to reduce the damage associated with alcohol and drugs? A) Television educational campaigns B) Safe injection sites C) Methadone maintenance therapy D) Syringe exchange programs 10) What is one of the four principles of psychoactive drug use? A) All psychoactive drugs should be banned. B) Most people are unable to control their own drug use. C) Every drug has an opposite drug that can counteract it. D) Drugs, per se, are not good or bad. 11) One of the four principles of psychoactive drugs is that every drug has what? A) effects on the heart B) impurities C) multiple effects D) mind altering potential 12) According to the four principles of psychoactive drug use would state; "the effect of any psychoactive drug depends on ___________________." A) the individual's history and expectations B) its legal status C) the user's diet D) the user's unique brain chemistry 13) Which term describes use of prescribed drugs in greater amounts than, or for purposes other than, those prescribed by a physician or dentist. A) Addiction B) Drug misuse C) Drug Abuse D) Dependence 14) Which term is used to describe, the use of a substance in a manner, amount, or situation such that the drug causes problems or greatly increases the chances of problems occurring? A) Addiction B) Dependence C) Abuse D) Tolerance 15) Which term refers to a state in which an individual uses a drug so frequently and consistently that it would be difficult for the person to get along without using the drug? A) Addiction B) Dependence C) Abuse D) Tolerance 16) Which term describes a situation when a person's reaction to a psychopharmaceutical drug (such as a painkiller) decreases so that larger doses are required to achieve the same effect? A) Addiction B) Dependence C) Abuse D) Tolerance 17) Because drugs alter consciousness and thought processes, the affects experienced will depend on which of the following? A) Expectations B) Attitudes C) Individual history D) All of the answers are correct 18) How does the text define a drug that is unlawful to possess or use? A) An illicit drug. B) A narcotic. C) An addictive drug. D) An abused drug. 19) How long have drugs played a significant role in human society? A) for thousands of years B) for about the past 200 years C) since the 1920s D) only since the 1960s 20) In the past 100 years, the introduction of vaccines to prevent diseases and antibiotics to cure some infections laid the foundation for what? A) Illicit drug markets. B) Our acceptance of medicines as the cornerstone of our health care system. C) Many dangerous drug interactions. D) The need to create a "war on drugs" ethos. 21) In 2006, the Santo Daime church was granted an exemption under section 56 of the Controlled Drugs and Substances Act to allow the religious ceremony to include which method involved using an illegal drug. A) the drinking of a tea B) smoking C) vaping D) snorting 22) In 2006, Santo Daime church was granted an exemption under section 56 of the Controlled Drugs and Substances Act, thereby allowing the church's members to import and use of _____. A) cannabis B) harmala alkaloids C) peyote D) LSD 23) Members of the Native American Church of Canada have also been granted a Schedule III drug exemption in the Controlled Drug and Substances Act, allowing which of the following? A) cannabis B) ayahuasca C) peyote D) psilocybin 24) Canada’s Drug uses four broad component which includes all the following EXCEPT which one? A) Prevention B) Treatment C) Medical intervention D) Law enforcement 25) Much of our information regarding drug use comes from survey questionnaires. What is one IMPORTANT limitation of questionnaires? A) The sample sizes are too small. B) People might not answer honestly. C) The people who do the studies are biased. D) The questionnaires don't ask questions about illicit drug use. 26) Despite the limitations of survey questionnaires, when can they be informative? A) If they are done year after year, because we can then look for changes over time. B) If they seek information regarding those who are not included in the survey. C) If they ask questions regarding alcohol use, because it is not illegal. D) If they ask about the misuse of prescription drugs. 27) According to the 2004 Canadian Addiction Survey, what percent of Canadians produce their own wine or beer at home? A) 6.7% B) 10.7% C) 18.7% D) 32.7% 28) The 2004 Canadian Campus Survey (CCS), revealed what percentage of the Canadian undergraduate, population had used Cannabis within the previous 12 months period? A) 10% B) 20% C) 30% D) 40% 29) If a professional told you they were collecting data from the following surveys, the CCS, the ACHA, and the OSDUHS, which population would they be studying? A) General population in Canada and the United States B) Incarcerated men C) Older Canadians D) Youth 30) What does the 2019 (ACHA) National College Health Assessment data provide? A) A snapshot of current use patterns among postsecondary students. B) A snapshot of the number of drug overdose emergency room admissions. C) A one day snapshot survey of the number of youth 18-24 presently admitted in some form of drug/alcohol treatment program. D) A snapshot of the current college/university support services offered across the country. 31) Which statement best describes the Drug use among Ontario Students (OSDUHS) survey? A) Began in 1977, and is the longest ongoing school-based survey in Canada. B) Began in 1977, and is the longest ongoing school-based survey in North America. C) Recently launched in 2015, in response to the growing concern regarding the opioid use in North America. D) Recently launched in 2015, in response to the growing concern regarding the opioid use in Canada. 32) In 2019, the substance most readily available to students was A) alcohol. B) cannabis. C) methamphetamine. D) cigarettes. 33) In the 2019 OSDUHS, when students in grades 7–12 were asked about their perceptions of the risks associated with selected drug-use behaviours, they identified the greatest risk of physical harm to be associated with which substance? A) OxyContin B) cocaine C) methamphetamine D) ecstasy 34) Who is included and how is the OSDUHS conducted? A) Interviews include thousands of students every second year from elementary and secondary schools across Ontario B) Interviews include thousands of students every second year from secondary schools across Ontario C) Interviews include thousands of students from colleges and universities every second year from across Ontario was D) Interviews include thousands of students every second year from colleges and universities, and elementary and secondary schools, across 35) Which Canadian survey examining trends in drug use, has been conducted every year since 2008? A) Canadian Addiction Survey B) Canadian Campus Survey C) Canadian Alcohol and Drug Use Monitoring Survey D) The National Survey of Drug use in Canada 36) The Canadian Campus Survey indicated that between 1998 and 2004 the use of cannabis declined in the Western provinces but increased where in Canada? A) Quebec B) Ontario C) British Columbia D) Atlantic Canada
Libro relacionado
- 2011
- 9780702031571
- Desconocido
Escuela, estudio y materia
- Institución
- Howard University
- Grado
- Psychology (PSY202)
Información del documento
- Subido en
- 14 de julio de 2023
- Número de páginas
- 23
- Escrito en
- 2022/2023
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- Examen
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test bank for drugs behaviour and society 4e hebb