Revised Definition of Addiction Could Lead to Millions More Being Diagnosed
The revisions are being proposed for the new edition of the American Psychiatric Association's Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders (DSM), scheduled for release in May 2013. The manual would enlarge the list of recognized symptoms for drug and alcohol addiction, and reduce the number of symptoms needed for a diagnosis. |
||
|
- New Designer Spray Delivers a Spritz of Alcohol for a Quick Buzz
- It's Easy for Underage Drinkers to Buy Alcohol Online
- Breaking the Cycle of Drugs, Alcohol and Crime
- FTC Re-Examines Alcohol Ads in Social Media Era
- Marijuana Use on the Rise Among Teens
- Baby Born Every Hour With Symptoms of Opioid Withdrawal
- A Troubling Trend in Teens Drinking Hand Sanitizer
- New 21st Century Drug Policy Strategy Released
Am I Alcoholic?
Am I Drug Addicted?
Self Test for Teens




A proposed revision to the definition of addiction by mental health specialists could lead to millions of additional people receiving an addiction diagnosis, The New York Times reports. The changes could lead to big consequences for both health insurers and taxpayers, according to the newspaper.
The National Council on Alcoholism and Drug Dependence, Inc. honoring ASAM Board Member Stanley E. Gitlow, MD with the NCADD Marty Mann Founder’s Award.
Alcohol in Scotland is about to get more expensive.
A recent in the journal, Pediatrics looked at the impact of alcohol intake in adolescent girls on the development of proliferative benign breast disease (BDD), which is known to cause a fourfold increase in the risk of developing breast cancer. The researchers further asked whether folate intake during the teenage years could positively influence the development of proliferative BDD in female adolescent drinkers.