If you pay attention to government surveys, you’ll learn that more than 20 million people suffer from addiction to alcohol or street drugs, or they are dependent on prescription drugs that they have been abusing. But a recent survey of American adults shows that the effects of addiction stretch much farther than this.
In 2004, 63 percent of adults surveyed said that addiction had impacted their lives, most of them because of a family member’s battle with drugs or alcohol. That means that more than 135 million people struggle either with their own addiction or that of a family member or someone close to them.
This doesn’t measure the number of children who are without a father or mother because they are in jail, in rehab or simply gone. Or the number of children who have parents at home but suffer neglect or abuse because of the drug use. It doesn’t measure the lost productivity or the number of businesses that have had to close because an owner lost everything to substance abuse or an employee embezzled enough to close the doors.
Substance abuse and addiction exacts a terrible toll on America. And successful recovery programs can be few and far between. Many rehabilitations state success rates between 5 and 20 percent.
To read the rest of this article, please go to: Effects of Addiction. Or visit the website for Narconon Arrowhead.
Friday, November 28, 2008
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