The Risks Associated With Alcohol Use and Alcoholism

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Part One: Alcoholism Today
Alcohol consumption is prevalent in our society; people drink while at parties, sporting events, and at dinner. Drinking is socially acceptable and legal, so there is no surprised that many drink. However, individuals can be deemed deviant if they exceed a certain level of drinking. The deviant receives the label of an alcoholic; to distinguish their behavior is outside the normal values of our society. “Nearly one-third of the US population will meet criteria for alcohol abuse or dependence within their lifetime” (Young, 2011). Alcoholism is considered deviant because the person drinks excessively and frequently disregarding the safety of themselves and others. Society stigmatizes these individual as clinically ill; their behavior is a result of disease which needs to be addressed and treated, in order to provide safety for the public. Alcoholism not only affects the public’s safety however it influences how the individual interacts with others, their ability to perform on the job, and has considerable health related risk. These behaviors and attitudes fuel the drive to treat alcoholics; in hopes that their behavior will go into remission since once an alcoholic always an alcoholic.
Western society is quick to judge a person’s drinking level; an individual must drink but must not consume too much. The values of drinking are heavily rampant in society’s media appearing in television shows, movies, and songs. Society takes these media messages and then internalizes them; creating social behaviors such as drinking games and drinking buddies (Young, 2011). There is no set guidelines to determine that a person is an alcoholic however there are social cues, “At the group level, social norms research e...

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...f their deviance. They should simply just consume alcohol. It is what is best for the greater society.

Works Cited

Macfarlane, A. D., & Tuffin, K. (2010). Constructing the Drinker in Talk about Alcoholics. New Zealand Journal Of Psychology, 39(3), 46-55.

McKay, J. R., & Hiller-Sturmhöfel, S. (2011). Treating Alcoholism As a Chronic Disease: Approaches to Long-Term Continuing Care. Alcohol Research & Health, 33(4), 356-370.

Rehm, J. (2011). The Risks Associated With Alcohol Use and Alcoholism. Alcohol Research & Health, 34(2), 135-143

: Young, L. (2011). Joe Sixpack: Normality, deviance, and the disease model of alcoholism. Culture & Psychology, 17(3), 378-397. doi:10.1177/1354067X11408133

Onciu, M. Iordache, A., & Pacala, B. (2013). Legal and Forensic Issues for Chronic
Alcoholism. Acta Medica Transilvanica, 18(2), 309-311.

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