Addictions and Recovery

    • About
  • This blog is an outgrowth of a course that I taught at Christian Brothers University in Memphis, TN, entitled “The Biology of Addiction”. This course, was, in essence, a study of human biology through the lens of addictions. My developing this course was, in turn, a consequence of an incident that occurred while I was still drinking, in which I passed out on a busy street while riding my bicycle. Fortunately, I had fallen to the right, onto the sidewalk out of harm’s way, rather than to the left, onto a traffic lane where I could have been run over. Sometime after starting my recovery, I thought about that incident and concluded that I had been given an opportunity to move forward with a new mission. The answer, to me as an academic, was to offer a course on the biology of addiction for non-majors.
  • That sense of mission sustained me through the rest of my teaching career.

    Now that I am retired, I still receive interesting information from agencies (such as the National Institutes of Health) and journals (Journal of the American Medical Association), so I would like to share this information with those who read this blog.
  • 22. From test tube to pharmacy shelf — the regulation of drug development

  • 21. A solicitation on behalf of the AZ House, a residential recovery center for men, in Jerusalem

  • 20. Nicotine. VI. Even years after smoking cessation, people are still at risk for COPD

  • 19. Nicotine. V. Smoking cessation

  • 18. Nicotine. IV. Vaping as a harm-reduction or smoking cessation strategy.

  • 16. Nicotine. II. It can lead to an addiction that is difficult to break.

  • 17. Nicotine. III. The dreadful company that nicotine keeps: Chemical components of cigarette smoke and their hazards

  • 15. Nicotine. I. Cigarettes are a highly engineered nicotine delivery system.

  • 14. Childhood trauma and the increased likelihood of developing alcoholism and drug abuse

  • 13. Therapeutic applications of psilocybin

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