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The Relationship Between Violence and Addiction
By: Susan
Adams, M. Ed l0/l/09
Objective: The objective of this article is to acquaint
readers with the relationship between violence and addiction.
Summary: It would seem to be self-evident that the
consuming of substances lowers boundaries between people and
therefore increases violence. With the consumption of alcohol,
people are more likely to lose reason and then control and to act
out negative emotion. The emotion that comes out after drinking is
drugged emotion. This article presents a discussion of violence,
substance abuse, and their interrelationship.
Violence can be physical and sexual. It occurs between strangers,
intimate partners, family members, and friends. It is of interest
to note that a prior history of being victimized may predispose some
people to drug and alcohol problems. And, drug and alcohol problems
may predispose some people to continued victimization. This is
related to the use of alcohol and drugs for coping in place of
learning more effective means to get one's needs met.
There is an enlarging body of research that points to the idea that
women who are addicted to alcohol and drugs have experienced higher
rates of violence than any other women. It is estimated that 90%
of all women with drug abuse problems have been sexually abused at
least one time in their lifetime.
Women, in general, appear more vulnerable to violence in the family
and within intimate relationshps while men seem to be more
predisposed to violence in non-intimate situations. Research in
psychiatric hospitals on types of violence experienced by
adolescents found that the most common traumatic experience for boys
was physical assault by peers, while girls most often reported being
victimized by forced sex acts.
People who have experienced repeated violence or who have been
targeted by a combination of physical and sexual violence appear to
be at higher risk for substance abuse compared to others. These
same people seem to suffer more severe addiction and mental health
problems. In a national study of addiction tratment programs,
female patientswho had been repeatedly sexually and physically
abused were much more likely than other patients to hav been in
addiction and mental heaalh treatment prior to the current episode
and to have health problems such as HIV/AIDS.
Sexual violence often begins as sexual abuse or incest in chldhood.
Female alcoholics
and addicts are also vulnerable to violence in adulthood. Female
alcoholics have been found to be more vulnerable to the abue of
their alcoholic husbands and partners than women who do not drink.
However, the cause and effects of alcohol and violence are difficult
to sort out.
It might be hypothesized, that after women drink heavily they are
more vulnerable to violence by their partners or that women drink
after they are beaten as a way of coping with the violence--or each
in different cases.
Domestic violence is strongly related to underlying issues of power
and control in relationships. Violence in the family is not directly
linked to drug or alcohol abuse, and therefore, does not disappear
with addiction treatment. In fact, in issues of violence in
domestic cases, the perpetrator often needs treatment to deal with
anger management, rathr than substance abuse. Either or both are
possible. If both are present, the substance abuse must be dealt
with first before any anger management would be effective.
Crime victims are also vulnerable to alcoholism. Research shows us
that criminal victimization usually precedes an increase in alcohol
use by crime victims. A major study on adult women in the United
States found that there was a direct relationship between the number
of times a woman was victimized and the liklihood that she would
become alcoholic. In addition, women who ause drugs or alcohol have
a greater risk of repeated assaults than do other women. In short,
alcohol an drugs increae the likelihood of violence and histories of
violence are often coped with by the over use of substances.
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