BEIJING, May 22
-- Women's addiction to alcohol, pills and other narcotics has long been
neglected with men, who traditionally have had higher rates of substance abuse,
the main focus.
But, reports LiveScience.com, the gender gap is
closing. More than 20 million girls and women in the United States abuse drugs
and alcohol and 30 million more are addicted to cigarettes, according to a
10-year research effort by the National Center on Addiction and Substance Abuse
(CASA) at Columbia University.
The study documents how women, kilogram-for-kilogram,
not only get more drunk or higher faster than men, but also become addicted more
easily.
The research results are presented in a new book from
CASA called "Women Under the Influence" (Johns Hopkins University Press, 2006).
The numbers could get worse, warns Susan Foster,
CASA's director of policy research and analysis, who directed the research
behind the book.
Teenage girls now smoke, drink and abuse drugs as
often as teenage boys. For certain drugs, such as prescription painkillers, the
abuse rate is higher in girls than boys.
Yet even as the rate of abuse becomes equal,
physiological and psychological factors combine to ensure that females are more
greatly affected by drugs and alcohol.
According to Foster, each single drink hits a woman
like a double. A woman's body contains less water and more fatty tissue which
increases alcohol absorption compared to a male body. And women have a lower
activity level of an enzyme called alcohol dehydrogenase (ADH), which breaks
down alcohol. Similar biological factors are at work in metabolizing illicit
drugs.
The risk of addiction to alcohol and drugs, including
nicotine, is approximately doubled as well. The reason may be hormonal or
psychological, according to ongoing research at the National Institute on Drug
Abuse.
Males and females abuse drugs for different reasons.
For example, teenage girls are more likely than boys to abuse substances in
order to lose weight, relieve stress or boredom, improve their mood, reduce
sexual inhibitions, self-medicate depression, and increase confidence, according
to CASA.
"Whereas the substance abuse field has a fairly good
understanding of the biological basis of gender differences in susceptibility to
alcohol addiction, the research on such differences with regard to narcotic
addiction is still in the early stages," Foster told LiveScience. "Women become
addicted [to narcotics] faster than men. Our understanding of why this may be
the case is more limited."
Foster is calling for more research funding for this
neglected area. Similarly, CASA president Joseph Califano said that
drug-treatment programs have long had a male-dominated, one-size-fits-all focus
and need to better embrace women and their needs.
More than 90 per cent of American women in need of
treatment don't get it, he said.
(Source: China Daily)
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