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Addiction Course – Complete Summary (Clinical Psychology Master)

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Escrito en
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Hey! This document is a comprehensive summary of the Addiction course (FSWP4029K) taught during the first period of the Clinical Psychology Master at Erasmus University of Rotterdam. It covers all required articles and the book chapters from 2025, along with detailed lecture notes, making the material easy to understand and perfect for exam preparation. You won’t regret buying it, and feel free to reach out if you have any questions! ;) Good luck!!

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¿Qué capítulos están resumidos?
All chapters requested throughout the course.
Subido en
1 de octubre de 2025
Número de páginas
172
Escrito en
2025/2026
Tipo
Resumen

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Lecture 1:
What is Addiction?

Definition (DSM-5):
Addiction, clinically referred to as Substance Use Disorder (SUD), is a chronic psychiatric condition
characterized by compulsive drug-seeking and drug-taking, loss of control over use, and continued
use despite harmful consequences.
→ It is recognized as one of the most prevalent psychiatric disorders.
For Diagnosis:
2 or more symptoms are required (from a list of 11) occurring within 12 months.




Why study addiction?

Global Mortality Risk Factors (2021)

Smoking: Causes the highest addiction-related deaths, with 8.08 million deaths annually.

Alcohol use: Accounts for 1.81 million deaths per year, making it one of the top preventable killers

worldwide.
Drug use: Linked to 463,000 deaths annually, though this may be underestimated due to

underreporting in some countries.

Other risks: Factors like obesity, high blood pressure, and secondhand smoke also contribute to

high mortality, showing addiction-related deaths are part of a larger set of preventable lifestyle risks.
Key insight:

Tobacco, alcohol, and drug use rank among the leading preventable causes of global mortality,

stressing the urgency of public health interventions.

,Opioid Crisis (United States):

Crisis involves heroin (illicit), prescription opioids like oxycodone, and synthetic opioids such as

fentanyl and nitazenes.
The U.S. records an average of 115 opioid overdose deaths per day, now the leading cause of death

among men under 30.

Lesson: Prescription misuse and the rise of synthetic opioids show how quickly medical drugs

can escalate into a national public health emergency.




Global Burden of Substance Use

Over 3 million annual deaths worldwide are directly linked to alcohol and drug use.

Men are disproportionately affected, both in mortality and in problematic use, reflecting gender

differences in risk-taking and vulnerability.
Alcohol is the most widely used addictive substance, with over 2 billion users worldwide,

creating the largest social and health burden despite relatively lower rates of dependence

compared to drugs like heroin.

Conclusion: The combination of high prevalence and health damage makes alcohol a global public

health challenge.

, Gambling and Behavioral Addictions

In 2013, the U.S. alone lost $119 billion to gambling, with China and Japan also showing massive

economic losses.
Demonstrates that addiction is not limited to substances; behaviors like gambling and gaming can

hijack reward systems in similar ways, leading to financial, social, and psychological harm.

Implication: Policies must address behavioral addictions alongside substance addictions.

Mental Health and Addiction in Europe

1 in 3 Europeans suffers from a mental disorder in any given year, including depression and anxiety.
Men are more likely to develop alcohol dependence, highlighting gendered vulnerability.

Mental disorders and substance use disorders often co-occur (comorbidity), worsening prognosis

and complicating treatment.

Key point: Addiction cannot be understood or treated in isolation — it is closely intertwined with

mental health.

Conceptual Model of Substance Use and Health:




1. Societal Factors:

Level of development: Wealthier nations may have more resources for prevention/treatment but

also greater availability of substances.
Policies & harm reduction: Laws, treatment access, prevention campaigns, and harm reduction

programs influence risk and outcomes.

Availability & affordability: Cheap and accessible substances → higher rates of use and harm.
Culture: Shapes norms around what substances are acceptable (e.g., alcohol vs. cannabis).

2. Individual Factors:

Biological factors: Genetics, brain chemistry, vulnerability to addiction.

Psychosocial factors: Trauma, stress, mental health, peer influence.

Socio-economic factors: Poverty, education, job insecurity — can increase risk of misuse.

, 3. Substance Use (Core Pathway):

Substance properties: Addictiveness, toxicity, pharmacology.

Way & means of administration: Smoking/injection = higher risk; oral use = slower effect.

Levels, patterns, and contexts of use: Frequency, dose, binge use, social vs. solitary use.

4. Health Outcomes:

Chronic: Long-term illness (e.g., liver disease, lung cancer, dependence).

Acute: Overdose, accidents, intoxication-related harms.
Leads to:

Mortality & disability by cause (deaths, disease burden).

Socio-economic consequences (lost productivity, healthcare costs).

Harm to others (family conflict, accidents, violence, environmental waste).

Societal Relevance of Substance Use

Health impact:
High burden on health care systems and hospitals.
Contributes significantly to morbidity (illness) and mortality (premature deaths).
Crime:
More than 50% of crimes are substance-related (e.g., drug trafficking, theft to fund use, violence
under influence).
Public safety:
Driving under influence increases accidents and fatalities.
Drug production (e.g., synthetic drugs) leaves toxic chemical waste, harming the environment and
communities.
Work & economy:
Reduced productivity, absenteeism, and unemployment due to substance problems.
Costs businesses and society billions in lost output.

Is it a real disorder?

1. Moral/Willpower Model (Dalrymple)
Claim: “Addiction is not a disease, addicts are people with a weak will.”
Addiction seen as a failure of self-control rather than a medical condition.
Responsibility lies entirely with the individual → treatment = discipline, punishment, or moral
reform.
2. Brain Disease Model (Neuroscience View)
Advocates: Alan Leshner, Nora Volkow.
Addiction = chronic brain disorder.
Evidence:
Drugs change brain circuits (reward, motivation, decision-making, self-control).
Imaging studies show long-lasting changes in dopamine systems.
Explains compulsive use and relapse despite negative consequences.
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