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Summary Component 3: Addiction - Methods of Modifying

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Component 3: Addiction - Methods of Modifying notes for WJEC A - level Psychology. Includes studies, dates and key information. Perfect for students in Wales and England!!

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Agonist and Antagonist Substitution

Agonist and antagonist substitution
-​ Medication as treatment
-​ Given to people with substance use addiction
-​ Work at synapse level to alter behaviour

Agonist substitution: Methadone
-​ Used for opioid addiction (heroin)
- receptors become less sensitive, so less dopamine is released in the brain
-​ Methadone is synthetic
-​ Mimics the effect of heroin, but without the “high”
-​ Given orally, so blood concentrations rise and fall slowly
-​ Patients can gradually lower their dosage until they can stop taking it (detox and
abstinence)

Antagonist substitution: Naltrexone
-​ Used for opioid addiction (heroin)
-​ Used for addicts in recovery in order to prevent relapse
-​ Doesn’t activate receptors, no effect (makes drug less rewarding)
-​ Offered alongside psychological counselling to help prevent risk of relapse
-​ Can be used upto 6 months, only after withdrawal symptoms

Evaluation
1.​ Effectiveness
-​ Methadone lasts longer than heroin, allows person to separate themselves from negative
effects of drug abuse
Gowing et al (2001)
-​ Methadone programmes are very effective at reducing physical and social harms
-​ Longer someone is in treatment, better their outcomes and lower relapse chance
Marteau et al (2015)
-​ Buprenorphine is 6x safer than methadone
-​ Longitudinal study of 5 years

2.​ Ethical Implications
-​ Both drugs have side effects
-​ Just providing a quick fix
-​ Could be treating the symptoms rather than the cause
-​ Almost ignoring the mental illness
-​ Drug addicts who face prosecution may be pressured into treatment programmes
against their free will

3.​ Social Implications
-​ Reduction of the number of drug addicts

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