Prevention Intervention Education Referral We believe that student alcohol and other drug use is shaped by a variety of influences in the physical, social, economic, and legal environment. To create a healthier environment, the Center promotes a combination of institutional , community, and public policy change. While educational approaches and awareness activities are a part of the web that makes up the prevention effort, the Center focuses on these environmental strategies:
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Choices? You make them every day. Some don't seem to be of great significance - what to wear, what movie to see, where to go eat out - while other choices have determined the course of your life. Especially the choice of where to attend college will have put you on a totally different path than a different choice you might have made. One of the major choices you make during your college years involves the use of alcohol. Now may be the time to review some choices you have already made and decide if they are right for you. Use the following information to help guide you.
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Alcohol can affect brain function - Drinking can affect your academic standing - Some of the reasons behind this might be that students who are out late partying often oversleep and miss class, and people who party several times a week can fall behind on their homework, projects or papers - causing a low GPA and even dropping out of school. Alcohol and sexual decision making - Alcohol and general health - Alcohol and Nutrition - Alcohol and Athletic Performance - Alcohol use cancels out any gains from your workout. Even though few athletes consume alcohol after a workout, practice or competition it can still cancel out any physiological gains you may have received from such activities. Not only does long-term alcohol use diminish protein synthesis resulting in reduced muscle gain, even short-term alcohol use can impede muscle growth. Alcohol causes dehydration and slows down the body's ability to heal. Speeding the recovery of sore muscles and injuries is integral to optimal performance. Alcohol is a toxin - a toxin that travels through your bloodstream to every organ and tissue in your body, causing dehydration and slowing your body's ability to heal itself. Alcohol use prevents muscle recovery. In order to build bigger and stronger muscles, your body needs sleep to repair itself after a workout. Because of alcohol's affect on sleep, however, your body is robbed of a precious chemical called "human growth hormone" (HGH). HGH is part of the normal muscle-building and repair process and the body's way of telling itself your muscle needs to grow bigger and stronger. Alcohol can decrease the secretion by as much as 70%! Also, when alcohol is in your body, it triggers the production of a substance in your liver that is directly toxic to testosterone. Testosterone is essential for the development and recovery of your muscles. Alcohol use depletes your source of energy. Once alcohol is absorbed through your stomach and small intestine and finally into your cells, it can disrupt the water balance in muscle cells, thus altering their ability to produce adenosine triphosphate (ATP), which is your muscles' source of energy. ATP provides the fuel necessary for your muscles to contract. Alcohol also reduces energy sources by inhibiting a process known as gluconeogenesis in which glucose is formed from substances other than glucose. When alcohol is oxidized by alcohol dehydrogenase (an enzyme), it produces an elevation of NADH, which ultimately reduces the amount of coenzyme that is essential in the production of ATP. The loss of ADP results in the lack of energy and the loss of endurance. Alcohol use inhibits ability to learn new information. Any athlete knows that preparation, such as learning plays and sound strategies, is essential to peak performance. However, alcohol can have a devastating effect on this process. When there is alcohol in your system, your brain's ability to learn and store new information is inhibited due to compromising of the hippocampus, a structure deep in the brain vital to the formation of memories. If you cannot form new memories, you cannot learn. Alcohol use hampers memory and retention. Unfortunately, it is not as simple as just not drinking while studying plays and before team meetings. Memory formation is a complex process that takes a long time. Many of your memories are solidified when you are not thinking about the material. In fact, much of memory formation occurs while you sleep. Alcohol affects your sleep cycle by disrupting the sequence and duration of normal sleep, reducing your brain's ability to learn and retain information. Even drinking up to six hours before you go to sleep will negatively affect your sleep cycle. For example, if you drink after a day of classes, studying or learning new plays, you are not getting 100 percent of your efforts because of the effects of the alcohol you drank. Consuming five or more alcoholic drinks in one night can affect brain and body activities for up to three days. Two consecutive nights of drinking five or more alcohol beverages can affect brain and body activities for up to five days. Alcohol use constricts metabolism and endurance. Being physically fit and well-conditioned is the hallmark of a champion. However, no matter how many wind sprints and laps you do, drinking alcohol constricts your aerobic metabolism and endurance. Alcohol use requires increased conditioning to maintain weight. Alcohol holds very little nutritional value to the athlete. The relatively high calories in alcohol are not available to your muscles. Alcohol calories are not converted to glycogen, a form of stored carbohydrates, and thus are not a good source of energy during exercise. Each drink contains approximately 100 - 150 empty calories. The body treats alcohol as fat, converting alcohol sugars into fatty acids. Alcohol use inhibits absorption of nutrients. Not only is alcohol devoid of proteins, minerals and vitamins, it actually inhibits the absorption and usage of vital nutrients such as thiamin (vitamin B1), vitamin B12, folic acid and zinc. Thiamin (vitamin B1) is involved in the metabolism of proteins and fat and the formation of hemoglobin. It is also essential to optimal performance for its role in metabolizing carbohydrates. Vitamin B12 is essential to good health. It helps maintain healthy red blood and nerve cells. Folic acid is an integral part of a coenzyme involved in the formation of new cells; a lack of it can cause a blood disorder called megaloblastic anemia, which causes a lowering of oxygen carrying capacity and thus negatively affects endurance activities. Zinc is also essential to your energy metabolic processes. Since alcohol depletes your zinc resources, the effect is an even greater reduction of your endurance. How can you tell if one of your friends or teammates is having
difficulties with alcohol? Many people can use alcohol in a
low-risk way without experiencing difficulties. However, there are
those people who use alcohol and have a variety of negative experiences,
which may suggest a more serious problem. Figuring out when a friends
drinking is no longer low-risk and has developed into a problem can
be tricky at times, especially since some people think there is a
stigma associated with having alcohol-related problems. In fact,
it is not uncommon for your friend to do everything he or she can
to explain away for hiding a problem. For more information or to
learn about how to help a friend with an alcohol or drug related
concern contact the Bemidji State University Counseling Center for
a free and confidential appointment with a professional counselor. |
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Bemidji State University Counseling Center
Bemidji State University Student Health Services
Responsible Men Responsible Women at Bemidji State University
College Drinking Prevention
Alcohol Screening Information
Mothers Against Drunk Drivers - Includes helpful statistics and resources
The National Council on Alcoholism and Drug Dependence
National Institutes of Health - National Institute on Alcohol Abuse
and
Information on alcohol and your college experience
Education on alcohol, nicotine, and other drugs
A service of the U.S. National Library of Medicine and National Institutes
Hope and help for families and friends of alcoholics
A fellowship for men and women recovering from alcoholism
Contains numerous links to alcohol, tobacco and other drug Websites
Online blood alcohol content calculator
The Higher Education Center for Alcohol and Other Drug Prevention
Booze News: Updates on Alcohol Prevention Policies
National College Alcohol Study done by Harvard School of Public Health
American Council on Alcoholism and Treatment Locator Helpline
Alcohol Screening
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The Bemidji State Consortium on Alcohol and Other Drugs is a partnership of concerned people from the campus and community who are committed to creating alternatives to substance abuse. This network encourages members of our campus and community to educate people and provide options to alcohol and other drug use. The Consortium also challenges individuals to be accountable for their choices and consider the impact their abuse has on the well-being of others. By including faculty members, students and other members of the community, the intention of this alliance is to actively engage a substantial amount of people in promoting and supporting these endeavors for the benefit of the BSU campus. The BSU Consortium exists to serve you. If you are interested in learning more about it, call 1-218-755-2080. |
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