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Essay / Research Paper Abstract
12 pages in length. The use and abuse of prescription drugs in the United States is a social problem that bleeds into every age, gender, ethnicity and economic status; that young adults have become a prominent player in this category is indicative of myriad persuasive elements that court the vulnerable individuals like a smitten lover. Bibliography lists 12 sources.
Page Count:
12 pages (~225 words per page)
File: LM1_TLCPresDrugs.rtf
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Unformatted sample text from the term paper:
adults have become a prominent player in this category is indicative of myriad persuasive elements that court the vulnerable individuals like a smitten lover. II. STATISTICS Statistical data provided
by the National Household Survey on Drug Abuse illustrate how two separate categories of prescription drug abusers represent "the most dramatic increase" for new users: twelve to seventeen and eighteen
to twenty-five. Most popular of all the available prescription drugs for the young adults include barbiturates, tranquilizers, and narcotics other than heroin, according to the 1999 Monitoring the Future
survey. High school seniors, for example - which range between seventeen and eighteen years of age - used Ritalin to a much greater degree in 1997 than what was
previously recorded for 1992: 2.8 percent and 0.1 percent, respectively. Moreover, college-aged young adults who imbibe in such prescription drugs as Percodan, Vicodin and Klonopin are doing so on
an increasing basis, which is noted quite accurately by the number of reports recorded by hospital emergency departments (NIDA, 2005). Gender plays a significant role in the type and amount
of prescription drugs used and abused in young adults between the ages of eighteen and twenty-five. Women, who have more physical and psychological incidents requiring prescription drugs, have a
tendency to misuse the drugs to a greater degree than their male counterparts, while at the same time narcotics and anti-anxiety drugs represent the likelihood of nearly fifty percent (NIDA,
2005). "In addition, research has shown that women and men who use prescription opioids are equally likely to become addicted. However, among women and men who use either
a sedative, anti-anxiety drug, or hypnotic, women are almost two times more likely to become addicted" (NIDA, 2005). III. COLLEGE SPORTS, STEROIDS AND HUMAN GROWTH HORMONE The commonality of
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