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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