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Addiction is a monthly peer-reviewed scientific journal established in 1903 by the Society for the Study of Addiction to Alcohol and other Drugs as the British Journal of Inebriety. It was renamed British Journal of Addiction to Alcohol & Other Drugs in 1947, then renamed to British Journal of Addiction in 1980, before finally obtaining its ...
Addiction publishes peer-reviewed research reports on pharmacological and behavioural addictions, bringing together research conducted within many different disciplines. Its goal is to serve international and interdisciplinary scientific and clinical communication, to strengthen links between science and policy and to stimulate and enhance the ...
Max Meier Glatt (26 January 1912 – 14 May 2002) was a German British psychiatrist and addiction expert. [1] [2] A survivor of the Dachau concentration camp, he went on to become a prominent expert in the treatment of addiction in the United Kingdom. [3] [2] He was one of the pioneers in the treatment of people with an addictive personality trait.
He was Editor-in-Chief of the journal Addiction for twenty-five years. In 1971 he delivered the Edwin Stevens Lecture . [ 5 ] Awards he received include the E.M. Jellinek Memorial Award in 1979 for his research on alcohol use disorders, [ 6 ] and being made a Commander of the Order of the British Empire (CBE) in 1987 for his services to social ...
4. Cookies. Cookie Monster can attest to the fact that cookies are addictive, and science backs him up. When you eat cookies, your brain finds the combination of refined carbs and fat especially ...
In 1968, it was renamed the Journal of Alcoholism, and in 1977, it was again renamed, this time to British Journal on Alcohol and Alcoholism. In 1983, it obtained its current name. It is co-owned and co-published by the Medical Council on Alcohol (MCA) along with Oxford University Press, which bought a 50% stake in the journal in 2011. [2]
Then I was asked if I was a physician’s assistant, and I was asked if I was the wife of the guy sitting across the table from me. Another asked if addiction was a real area of medicine.” The demands of a rural community, where resources are spread thin, makes it more difficult to focus a practice on addiction medicine.
Nick Heather was born in London in 1938 and was the son of an off-license manager. Born and still officially named Brian Heather, in an interview for the Journal Addiction he explained after his birth his father remarked he looked like "old Nick" due to thick black hair. [4]