What is alcohol? “A legal, sedative drug which changes the way we feel” (Hull). Why can alcohol …show more content…
First, with alcoholic family members some family may try to help him or her through financial aid or comfort. Alcoholism tends to break families apart; therefore, families try their best to unite themselves. However, when they do not face the problem and not seek treatment, the problem will grow worse and lead to further effects. With this problem, issues like divorce, stress, infidelity, conflicts, and financial issues can occur. When a family breaks up with children, children are often in the middle position and debates over custody can occurs. If divorce and full custody to one parent occurs, the child will have a broken relationship with the other parent. According to the American Association for Marriage and Family Therapy (AAMFT), they say that “Children of alcoholics may experience any of the following: chaos, uncertainty, instability, inconsistent discipline, emotional and physical neglect, arguments, instability of parents’ marriage, disorganization, violence and/or physical and sexual abuse, emptiness, loneliness, the terror of repeated abandonment, or the witnessing of violence or abuse to others” (Children of Alcoholics). Children can have a major effect because they use their parents as role models. Children are sometimes also able to watch the decline in health amongst their parents. Alcoholics can have some major health issues like increased risks for some cancers, liver disease, brain damage, …show more content…
Treatments include detox and withdrawal, learning skills and treatment plan, psychological placing, medication, support, and spiritual guidance. For any friend or family who sees anyone whom they know would hate to see them suffer under addiction and harm others. “Treatment may involve a brief intervention, individual or group counseling, an outpatient program, or a residential inpatient stay” (Mayo Clinic). Of all the available treatments given to alcoholics, support and motivation is the most important part of treatment, every child of an alcoholic would love to see their parent overcome an addiction to gain the trust of the child. Any adult whether parent or not are looked up to by younger people; therefore, an adult must take on his or her responsibilities to raise children in modest ways. Statistics prove that one in five children become alcoholics if they have an alcoholic person in interest. The causes are always trying to be prevented in which the effects would not be the results. The effects strongly outweigh the causes in possibility and the treatments are provided in many places. However, it depends if the addict believes he or she is an