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    What is Alcoholism

    Alcoholism: Addictive Disease?

    Alcoholism is a severe form of alcohol dependence characterized by the occurrence of withdrawal symptoms once the alcohol drinking custom has been curtailed. The person suffering from alcoholism will experience excessive sweating, severe discomfort, restlessness, etc. In turn, all these will trigger a set of emotional and mental withdrawal indicators which are direct responses to the absence of regular doses of alcohol the body has gotten used to.

    Alcohol is a depressant and it inhibits symptoms that are related with the use of uppers. The body realizes its need for alcohol once its dampening effect on the brain and the body's central nervous system begins to lift.

    Alcoholism is developed over time via habitual and unchecked alcohol intake that is more often than not targeted to obtain one's self intoxicated. The condition is progressive and the circumstances surrounding the way of getting over alcoholism can be snarled up and hard for concerned individuals.

    The physical, emotional and mental anguish that a person experiences from alcohol withdrawal, leads the individual to assuage the problem by giving in to the urge to drink alcohol; inadvertently start another round of a vicious cycle.

    What really sets alcoholism apart from mere alcohol dependence is the degree of addiction that an individual finds himself in. Individuals who suffer from alcoholism are those who continue heavy drinking habits despite instances of severe trauma that would normally urge one to stop and seek help. For instance, a person suffering from alcoholism may lose his or her job due to the unavoidable effects of the substance abuse and yet be unwilling or not able to stop the debilitating habit.

    Alcoholism is a progressive condition in the sense that it begins from developed alcohol dependence over time. An individual who begins unchecked alcohol intake will create a physiological environment that makes alcoholism possible.

    Generally, there is a faction between those who believe that alcoholism is a disease and those that think that it's mere vice. The difference between these two conditions is that if alcoholism is a disease, the individual suffering from it requirements to be treated and will not be able to recover on his or her own; if it's a vice, then the individual has full control over the situation and is just unwilling to kick the habit.

    Whether alcoholism is disease or not remains to be argued and proven within the boundaries of scientific methodologies for a consensus among specialists. In the meantime, the fact remains that alcoholism leads to a host of complications, from social ostracism to morbidity. Alcohol associated deaths range from external physical accidents to internal diseases that attack the body's essential organs like the liver, pancreas, the heart, and the brain.

    The reason why some professional groups concur that alcoholism is a disease stems from the fact that it may be a hereditary trait. Some studies express that individuals with a family history of alcohol abuse and alcoholism are likely to develop the same condition over time. It is, however, possible that aside from being genetically predisposed to alcoholism as passed on via family genealogy, individuals from a family with the predisposition towards alcoholism grow up in an environment that rewards heavy drinking that would actually constitute abuse.

    Clearly, we observe here another nature versus nurture battle, this time on the topic of alcoholism. This time though, the issues are more complex since there seems to be a fine line between the two when in comes to alcoholism. For one thing, the physiological conditions created by the condition of alcoholism makes it categorically a disease but at the same time, it's considered a vice because the individual is capable of making the decision to end the self-destructive process.

    While debating the nature of alcoholism seems moot and counter productive, concluding on this and making the right decision as basis for treatment and cure is vital to proper management of severe alcohol dependence. Caution must be exercised over simplification of the condition to ensure that the treatment administered is correct.

    If alcoholism is treated as a disease then treatment may consist of medication alone, while if it's considered a vice, the treatment of the person suffering from alcoholism may be lacking in substance and any long term benefits.

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