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How to Learn More about the Damaging Health Effects of Alcohol

01 January 2006 · Viewed 4485 times · Disclaimer & Terms
Tags: human anatomy, opening experience, alcohol consumption
How to Learn More about the Damaging Health Effects of Alcohol

 

You might not understand the damaging health effects from excess consumption of alcoholic beverages such as beer, wine, or hard liquor. However, there are several ways to learn about how alcohol can affect your body and mind, helping you to understand why drinking too much alcohol is detrimental.

Take a Human Anatomy Class in College

While in college, enroll in a human anatomy class to study the organs of the body. Students enrolled in human anatomy classes have a chance to view healthy and unhealthy human organs that are kept in specimen jars. Make sure to compare the condition of the body’s damaged and healthy organs to see the differences. Someone with cirrhosis of the liver from alcoholism might have donated a liver to your college’s laboratory, and you can see the way that it is damaged from this debilitating disease.

Attend Alcoholics Anonymous Meetings

Contact a local Alcoholics Anonymous group so that you can hear the stories of its participants. This can be an eye-opening experience for anyone who attends. Whether you drink or not. These meetings help you learn about the negative impact that alcohol has on society in real-time. Professionals, like those at The Law Offices of Schiro and Zarzynski, know that it truly destroys people’s lives the world over. Remember that what you see and hear is confidential to protect the anonymity of the members, but you can listen to the members of AA as they talk about how alcoholism destroyed their relationships with friends and relatives. After listening to what these individuals have experienced, you will want to moderate or stop your own alcohol consumption.

Watch Documentaries about Drunk Driving

Some scientists have conducted studies of drunk driving by having test subjects drink different amounts of alcohol so that they can see how their reaction times change. The test laboratories use simulated machines that have steering wheels and computer images so that the subjects can try to drive. By watching these movies, you can see how only one or two alcoholic beverages can alter a driver’s physical reflexes and cognitive abilities, which lead to collisions.

Visit a Special Education Classroom

In some cases, the alcohol that a pregnant woman drinks will affect her unborn infant, leading to significant brain damage. Fetal alcohol syndrome can change the facial features and brain structure of unborn infants, leading to cognitive delays and poor physical growth. This is an incredibly sad situation and it is unfair for the child. The effects of fetal alcohol syndrome are far-reaching and totally change the potential quality of life for the child. If you can visit a school that offers special education classes, then there are likely students who have this condition.

Hundreds of individuals are injured or killed worldwide by drunk drivers each year, and you can listen to the reports of these incidences on the television or radio. Not only is it illegal to drive after drinking alcohol, but also, you risk a collision that could kill or injure you or someone else. Over 10,000 individuals in the United States are killed in alcohol-related vehicular accidents each year.

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