Risk factors and signs of substance use
Risk factors
- Genetics and your biology: People can react to drugs differently. Some people like the feeling the first time they try a drug and want more. Others hate how it feels and never try it again.
- Mental health problems: People who have untreated mental health problems, such as depression, anxiety, or attention deficit/hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) are more likely to become addicted.
- Environmental factors
- Trouble at home: If your home is an unhappy place or was when you were growing up, you might be more likely to have a drug problem.
- Trouble in school, at work, or with making friends: You might use drugs to get your mind off these problems.
- Social factors
- Hanging around other people who use drugs: They might encourage you to try drugs.
- Starting drug use when you’re young: When kids use drugs, it affects how their bodies and brains finish growing. This increases your chances of becoming addicted when you’re an adult.
Source- Medline Plus
To learn about protective factors, click here.
Signs that someone is using substances
- Changing friends a lot
- Spending a lot of time alone
- Losing interest in favorite things
- Not taking care of themselves – for example, not taking showers, changing clothes, or brushing their teeth
- Being very energetic, talking fast, or saying things that don’t make sense
- Quickly changing between feeling bad and feeling good
- Having different eating or sleeping habits
- Missing important appointments
- Having problems at work or at school
- Having problems in personal or family relationships
Source- Medline Plus