YOU WERE LOOKING FOR :Marijuana Drug Profile Research Paper
Essays 31 - 60
initiated by the police, who have more freedom and a wider range of choices in how to proceed when dealing with a juvenile than wi...
argument against marijuana legalization. Califano specifically focuses on the issue of marijuana as a gateway drug and cites sta...
Wilson, 2003). Short term effects are memory lapses, impairment of coordination and speech and the commonly associated drunken beh...
(Kemp, 2005). In American mainstream culture, making eye contact is expected, as this indicates that the other person is listening...
of trepidation. Not only was the drug then illegal in all states, the government had effectively convinced the public that mariju...
of England (The American Revolution, 2007). Before the American Revolution he lived in America and was there when legal acts wer...
population want to be able to take care of themselves, yet they are rarely given the tools with which to accomplish this objective...
bodies to produce an excessive amount of cholesterol (Statins safe, 2004). Left untreated, this condition is associated with havin...
ABSTRACT This paper explores the manner in which...
debate in recent years regarding the drug marijuana and whether or not its effects on the body and brain are really as dramatic an...
and medical marijuana would be sold in pharmacies and likely grown by pharmaceutical companies. In one particular article it is ...
protecting brain cells from stroke and trauma damage. A recent study also showed that cannabinoids block the formation of new memo...
This paper reports the history of the use of marijuana as a medical intervention and when it became illegal in this country. It po...
The debate over the relative merits...
that has always been associated with the civilization of a society. Yet, it appears that once a society is considered civilized it...
This 6 page paper discusses the merits of treating depression with marijuana instead of Prozac. The writer argues that using marij...
users were admitted, which made up 0.2% of all the relevant admissions and cocaine users, (no smoked) had 12,876 admissions, makin...
it made people violent and by the 1930s, the substance was illegal in all states (Kuhn, Swartzwelder & Wilson, 2003). In 1936, Po...
use as of the early 1980s and continues to be one of the most commonly abused street drugs (Methamphetamine). Results from the 20...
compounds and has been implicated in a high percentage of automobile crashes and workplace accidents" (Medical Marijuana ProCon.or...
specific demographic populations. Fu (2001) conducted a study in Hong that examined the increase in the incidence of CVD that oc...
such that their motives are interpreted as malevolent, beginning in early adulthood and present in a variety of contexts" (DSM-IV,...
levels (Rickheim et al 269). Fireman, Barlett and Selby (2004) Over the past decade disease management programs (DMPs) have prol...
This research paper, first of all, presents a ten-item annotated bibliography that pertain to the legalization and use of medical ...
focus to intervention and rehabilitation. Others oppose this view, arguing that the War on Drugs is working and that to decriminal...
first institution listed in regards to male offenders, which is the James V. Allred prison unit, located just outside of Wichita F...
health and well-being (Neff and Waite, 2007). While illicit substance usage peaked in the late 1970s, recent statistics indicate t...
events (Owen, 2007). This action includes "presentation of antigen by dendritic cells" as well as the "degranulation of mast cells...
to the medications needed to ensure their health. Beginning in 2004, Medicare began to offer aid, $600 a year, for covering the co...
Drug abuse, regardless of the type of drug, has a very negative effect on the body and brain of the user and abuser. Chemicals fro...