A Case Study of a Puerto Rican Woman with Comorbid Addiction
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, ASSESSING FOR PATIENTS WITH COMORBID ADDICTION 2
Assessing and Treating Clients with Impulsivity, Compulsivity, and Addiction
Introduction
Addiction is a long-lasting neurotic disorder portrayed by an individual seeking
medication or behavior disorder and its continuous presentation which is normally challenging to
renounce regardless of its unsafe side effects (National Institute on Drug Abuse, 2016).
Impulsivity is a habit to go through on certain preferences without considering the possible
results. Some times people show impulsivity for satisfaction without thinking about its
consequences. A compulsivity is an act that an individual feels duty-bound to exercise to calm
his or her nervousness. For individuals with this disorder, after concluding the compulsive
conduct, he or she is relieved of anxiety and gains comfort. Addiction coordinates the
advancement from impulsive to compulsive characteristics. An individual is prone to impulsivity
in the early addiction days. During impulsivity, an individual often is inclined to certain feelings
irresponsibly to meet the desires of his/her addiction.
Addiction entails various aspects including inappropriate response to surrounding
stressors, a decisive issue, a condition resulting due to uncontrolled thoughts, and actually an
acquired behavior. Addiction cannot be discussed in depth without having a look at the numerous
factors that are associated with it mentally, socially, biologically and many other perspectives.
Nevertheless, addiction is a remediable health disorder because individuals have the potential to
restore the behavior and minimize its harmful effects. Statistics show that addiction has
interfered with the lives of about 10% of the overall United States citizens. Looking at addiction
from this perspective is crucial in enhancing a health-centered reaction that warrants its complete
control. The rationale for this paper is to assess the Puerto Rican woman case study having a