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Substance Abuse and Behavioral Disorder Counselor

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AVG. SALARY

$57,180

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EDUCATION

Master's degree

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JOB OUTLOOK

Increasing

Real-Life Activities

Real-Life Communication

You've been asked to give a five-minute presentation to a group of recovering teenage alcoholics on the dangers of drug use. Although at first you are hesitant to enter into a situation where you have to be the heavy, it doesn't take you long to reconsider.

The thrust of your presentation will be the reasons not to begin abusing alcohol. You decide upon a strategy of breaking down the body into parts and explaining how each of these parts is affected when excessive amounts of alcohol are involved.

"Communication skills are critical to addictions counseling," says Linda James, a drug and alcohol counselor. "This includes all aspects of communication -- verbal and non-verbal. Communication skills are used for teaching, counseling and reporting."

Here are the key areas you are going to touch on, along with the way each is affected by booze:

Brain

  • oxygen flow reduced = muddled thinking, loss of motor skills and slurred speech
  • potential for brain damage, unconsciousness and even death

Heart

  • heart workload increased = high blood pressure, irregular heartbeat and even heart failure
  • long-term effects = permanent damage to heart muscle

Stomach

  • stomach lining irritated = vomiting
  • long term = ulcers and cancer of the esophagus

Arteries

  • swollen arteries in head puts pressure on nerves = headaches

Take these five areas and work them into a short speech, three to five paragraphs in length. Here's a suggestion: take what you deem the most serious alcohol hazard and leave it for the end. Your speech could have a harder punch that way.

Contact

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  • 1-800-GO-TO-XAP (1-800-468-6927)
    From outside the U.S., please call +1 (424) 750-3900

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