Can Alcohol Use “Not Abuse” Retard a Person’s Ability to Concentrate and Retain Information?

Question by Djhan: Can alcohol use “not abuse” retard a person’s ability to concentrate and retain information?
I’m asking ’cause I usually have two or 3 drinks a day and I find that recently I’ve been having a lot of difficulty concentrating and retaining info. I never had difficulty concentrating and retaining before, in fact I never really had to study before, I’d just read the material and it would stay – but no more. I can’t even seem to focus long enough to get through reading my study texts. Do you think the alcohol is causing this?

Best answer:

Answer by Wendy S
Below are some great Australian sites with lots of info about alcohol.
I hope one of them has the answer.

Give your answer to this question below!

 


 

Addiction and the Brain – drug or alcohol abuse is a disease. – Tim Brunson, PhD, talks about how the brain works regarding addictions (alcohol, drug addiction). Why does your brain respond to repeated behavior? How can you use suggestion and imagination to create an alternate reward instead of alcohol, prescription or illegal drugs? Listen to this video on addictions and find answers!

 

UNR Gets Grant for New Alcohol Abuse Screening

Filed under: alcohol abuse

The Center for the Application of Technologies (CASAT), a unit of the University of Nevada Division of Health Sciences, is on the forefront of early detection of alcohol abuse, ranked as one of the nation's leading causes of chronic …
Read more on KTVN

 

Male Military Veterans More Likely to Seek Alcohol Abuse Treatment

Filed under: alcohol abuse

A new research presented today at the American Public Health Association's 140th Annual Meeting in San Francisco, California showed male military veterans with history of heavy alcohol use are more likely to get into treatment than their civilian …
Read more on TestCountry.com (blog)

 

Alcohol Abuse Common among Bullies, Victims

Filed under: alcohol abuse

A new study suggests both school bullies and their victims are likely to abuse alcohol after a bullying episode. University of Cincinnati researchers examined bullying, recent alcohol use and heavy drinking episodes among more than 54,000 7th – 12th …
Read more on PsychCentral.com

 


Tags: , , , , , ,