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Culture: Drugs, Alcohol, and Tobacco

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Title: Culture: Drugs, Alcohol, and Tobacco


1
Culture Drugs, Alcohol, and Tobacco
  • Culture, Health, and Illness
  • Ch. 8

2
Total Drug Effect
  • The effect of any medication on an individual
    (total drug effect) depends on
  • Pharmacological properties
  • Attributes of the drug
  • Attributes of the recipient
  • Attributes of the person prescribing the drug
  • Physical setting (micro-context)
  • Social/cultural/political/economic environment
    (macro-context)

3
  • Macro-context

Micro-context
Prescriber
Recipient
Drug
4
Placebo Effect
  • The total drug effect, but without the presence
    of a drug.
  • The belief of those receiving or administering
    the substance or procedure in the efficacy of
    that placebo or procedure that it can have
    psychological and physical effects.
  • Been shown to provide relief for arthritis,
    angina, pain, hay fever, headaches, ulcers,
    hypertension, anxiety, depression, and even
    schizophrenia.
  • Also shown to induce side-effects.

Click on pill for recent article from MSNBC
5
Placebos
  • Placebos, whether medications or procedures, are
    culture-bound and context-bound in that they are
    administered within a specific social and
    cultural context that validates both the placebo
    and the person administering it.
  • It is an essential ingredient in all forms of
    healing and in everyday life.
  • Other components include the emotional dependence
    of those seeking healing in the society on
    prominent people in that society, such as healers.

6
The Drug
  • Various factors about the drugs itself can impact
    the success of the placebo effect. These
    include
  • Color
  • Brand name affiliation
  • Size
  • Taste
  • Texture
  • Shape
  • Overall appearance
  • Route or intake

7
The Recipient
  • What one thinks about drugs
  • What one knows about drugs
  • What one has been told
  • Whether (s)he is of the same
    mindset as the prescriber.
  • Placebo type personality
  • Over-anxious
  • Emotional dependence
  • Immaturity
  • Poor personal relationships
  • Low self-esteem

8
The Prescriber
  • The characteristics of the prescriber are crucial
    to the placebo effect. These include certain
    cultural symbols, such as a doctors coat,
    stethoscope, charms, prescription pad.
  • Others include their age, appearance, clothing,
    manner, air of authority, belief in the drug or
    placebos effect.
  • The confidence the recipient has in the
    prescriber contribute to the effect.

9
Drug Dependence
  • Psychological dependency relates to the
    psychological need of the person to crave the
    drug-induced symptoms or their need to stave off
    the withdrawal symptoms.
  • The symbolic meaning of the drug is a significant
    factor in dependency.

10
Drug Dependence
  • Drug use is strongly tied to the social values
    and expectations of the macro-context.
  • The drug can be used to normalize or improve
    social relationships by bringing it into
    alignment with those around you. This is
    illustrated by the belief of only 1/3 of
    participants in a study believing aspirin was a
    drug.
  • The trust a society places in its prescribers,
    which may be influenced by those making the
    drugs, is also an essential element in dependency.

11
Physical Dependency/Drug Addiction
  • Physical dependency, or addiction, is a physical
    concept relates to the actual physical need of
    the person to stave off the withdrawal symptoms,
    such as caffeine drinkers or smokers who shift to
    a lower level in their consumption, but
    unconsciously increase the frequency to keep the
    levels consistent in their bloodstream.
  • The socio-cultural environment in which the drug
    taking occurs has set rules.

12
Physical Dependency/Drug Addiction
  • The level to which one is integrated into a
    culture, such as soldiers in Vietnam during the
    war, may determine how easily one can kick the
    habit. If the culture is dismantled, such as
    when the soldiers returned home, the ability to
    end a dependency is often easier.
  • In many cases, religious figures or healers (ex.
    Malay Bomohs) have been successful in assisting
    people to end their drug habits.

Traditional Bomoh healer
13
Alcohol Use and Abuse
  • Alcohol is one of the most widely used chemical
    comforters in the world. It is also used as
    food, medicine, a narcotic, an energizer, an
    aphrodisiac, a form of payment, a preservative, a
    disinfectant, and as a religious drink.
  • Excessive use is a feature of many groups
    globally, which is why it is also a serious
    public health issue globally (1.8 million deaths
    annually)

14
Alcohol Use and Abuse
  • At the level of the individual, the effect of
    alcohol depends on physical (ones build, stomach
    contents, gender, drink volume or type),
    psychological (personality, current emotional
    state), and socio-economic (attitude of culture
    toward normal or problematic drinking, income
    level) factors.

15
Alcoholism Models
  • Moral
  • Disease
  • Political/Economic
  • Socio-Cultural

The American Temperance Society (1862)
The ALDH2-2 Alcohol Gene
Court Street Shuffle Web Site
16
Alcohol Cultures
  • Abstinent
  • Ambivalent
  • Permissive
  • Over-permissive

17
Alcohol Cultures Identity
  • The focus is on creating and maintaining social
    identity and social relationships.
  • This includes the purpose (badge of identity,
    socialization) setting, whether public or
    private, whether it takes place in a male or
    female space.

18
Alcohol Variables
  • Family Drinking
  • Family Structure
  • Personality Variables
  • Spouses Drinking Behaviors
  • Drinking Environment

19
Protective Cultural Factors
  • Exposure of children to alcohol at an early age
    in a stable family
  • Use of alcohol in a very diluted form
  • Alcohol being viewed mainly as a food and
    consumed at meals
  • Parents presenting an example of moderate
    drinking
  • Drinking not being given any moral importance
  • Drinking not considered proof of adulthood or
    virility
  • Abstinence being socially acceptable
  • Drunkenness being socially unacceptable
  • Widely accepted norms about acceptable drinking
    behavior

20
Tobacco
  • Tobacco is also a chemical comforter, which may
    act with stimulant and depressant effects.
  • In most cases, cultural influences encourage
    smoking behaviors, which are the single greatest
    modifiable danger to ones health.
  • Symbolic meanings are associated with smoking
    dependencybeyond the pharmaceutical properties
    of nicotine or tobacco.

WHO Tobacco Atlas
21
Demographic, Health, and Behavioral Factors
Associated With Smoking
  • In one recent study (Plotnikoff, R., et al,
    2007), older individuals, females, individuals
    with higher educational attainment, those who are
    not regularly physically active were more likely
    to have smoked in their lifetime.
  • However, physical activity was a significant
    factor in ones likelihood of successfully
    quitting.
  • Age, marital status, and income were also
    significantly associated with quitting.

22
Rationale for Teen Smoking
  • To control their mood
  • To fit in with their friends and peer group
  • To create or maintain a social image
  • Because they are dependent on the physical and
    psychological effects
  • Curiosity
  • Family influence
  • Personal choice

23
Precontemplators
  • In a British study, 45 of smokers rejected
    outright the dangers of smoking to their heart
    health.
  • 14 completely accepted it caused heart disease.
  • 11 that it caused lung cancer.

24
Economic Aspects of Smoking
  • The tobacco industry uses economic arguments to
    persuade governments, the media and the general
    population that smoking benefits the economy. It
    claims that if tobacco control measures are
    introduced, tax revenues will fall, jobs will be
    lost and there will be great hardship to the
    economy
  • Philip Morris is the worlds largest
    transnational tobacco company. However, excluding
    the US domestic market, BAT sells the most
    cigarettes worldwide and has the largest network
    in the most countries.
  • In the USA alone over 10 billion is spent a year
    on marketing cigarettes, and this at a time when
    advertising is prohibited on television and
    radio, when there are limitations on certain
    types of outdoor advertising and sponsorship, and
    when cigarette sales are falling.

25
Exportation of Drugs
  • 50 of all the worlds drugs are produced by 25
    firms.
  • 75 of the worlds population lives outside of
    the U.S. and the cost of imported drugs is a
    major economic drain.
  • Poorer nations represent only 20 of legal drug
    users, but they pay a disproportionate cost and
    still dont have access to the WHOs List of
    Essential Drugs.

26
Religious Drugs
  • Marijuana
  • Psilocybin
  • Peyote
  • Ayahuasca
  • Morning glory
  • Iboga
  • Jimson weed

27
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28
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29
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