| Wednesday, July 5th, 2006 | Emily Halevy | CWK Producer |
“What’s so important about this study is that it makes us take a look at how we treat women alcoholics and addicts, because we have to step in and say, ‘just because this works for the men does not mean it works for the women’. ”
– Heather Hayes, M.Ed, Licensed Professional Counselor
More than 20 million women and girls are addicted to drugs and alcohol, with another 30 million addicted to nicotine. Traditionally thought of as a male dominated problem, new research from Columbia University says that women, in fact, are more vulnerable to substance abuse.
Renee Potter is one of them. She started smoking when she was eight years old.
“For a while I kind of smoked cigarettes to run away from my problems,” she says.
But her dependency quickly led to other addictions - alcohol, pot, methamphetamine, cocaine. “There’s some people that can actually do that - just experiment once in their whole life and never do drugs again,” she says, “but it wasn’t like that for me. I started and couldn’t stop.”
According to the National Center on Addiction and Substance Abuse, Renee is not alone. She’s among the millions of girls who suffer from what used to be thought of as a male problem - drug abuse and addiction.
“We used to believe that boys were more likely to use than girls - and that there were more boys out there using than girls,” explains licensed professional counselor Heather Hayes. “And what this study has shown is that the numbers are the same now.”
In fact, according to the new study, women are more affected by addictive substances than men. “Some of the findings have found that every time a man has a drink and a women has the same amount, it’s almost double [the] impact for her - because of body fat, because she doesn’t hold as much water,” explains Hayes.
Experts say physical, along with hormonal and emotional stress - especially during adolescence - can lead girls into a cycle of drug addiction.
“Take a teenage girl who’s going through puberty and is feeling awkward, their bodies are changing,” says Hayes. “They don’t really know how to interact with boys, but boys are becoming more important - and you pour drugs on top of that; you may get immediate relief, but then what happens afterwards makes it worse.”
Which is why, she says, it’s crucial to have a zero-tolerance policy for alcohol and drugs. And - more importantly - to teach your daughters to love themselves: “Teach them self-respect, teach them self-care, teach them how to nurture their self-esteem.”
All the things that Renee is now learning, in therapy. “I’m taking care of myself,” she says, “and I’m doing something for myself that I know I deserve.”