¶ … Alcoholism a Disease?
There is little doubt that alcoholism is a chronic condition, which in 1956 was classified by the American medical Association as an illness, elevating the status to disease in 1966 (Baldwin Research Institute, 2015). However, despite this announcement, there still appears to be a significant level of dispute within the medical community, where the concept of alcoholism as a disease has remained unproven (Hanson, 2013), however many of the characteristics of the condition appear to be aligned with a disease diagnosis (Borelli, 1989). The aim of this paper is to consider the concept of alcoholism as a disease, considering the evidence for and against this hypothesis.
The Association of alcohol disease began during the 1800s, proposed by Dr. Benjamin Rush, who argues those who drank too much alcohol were diseased, and utilised this argument to promote his revisionist ideas (Baldwin Research Institute, 2015). However, simply calling it a disease does not make it so; indeed a number of commentators have argued that giving alcoholism slave is made more socially acceptable, and created the ability for drinkers to externalise the drunkenness, moving for behavioural decisions from the realm of unsociable social activity, to the sphere of illness (Hill, 1985). This perception has been furthered by the presence of alcoholism, described as alcohol abuse and alcohol...
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