Sunday, July 05, 2026

How addiction impacts brain health

 The long‑term health effects of addiction never make their way into psychoeducation or psychosocial support offered to people in recovery. Interventions tend to focus on immediate harms — liver damage, withdrawal risks, and overdose prevention.

While these are essential in shaping an individual’s motivation and commitment to recovery, educating people about how today’s choices shape tomorrow’s brain health is an overlooked but powerful form of recovery capital. It can act both as a deterrent  to relapse and an enabler of healthier lifestyle decisions. 

Adding to dementia burden

One area where this gap is becoming increasingly visible is dementia. India is facing a growing public‑health challenge: a 2023 study estimates that 7.4 per cent of adults over 60 — around 10 million people — are currently living with dementia. As the population ages, this number is expected to rise sharply. At the same time, a growing body of research is linking chronic substance use to both temporary and long‑term cognitive impairment, including an elevated risk of developing dementia later in life.

Addiction is now widely understood as a neurobiological disease — one that alters the brain’s physical architecture and disrupts cognitive processes. Long‑term exposure to alcohol, opioids, stimulants, or sedatives can impair neuronal communication, increase neuroinflammation, and damage the brain’s ability to repair itself. Over time, these changes may become irreversible. Emerging evidence suggests that such substance‑induced neurotoxicity may accelerate or unmask neurodegenerative processes, contributing to earlier or more severe cognitive decline.

This connection has profound implications for how India approaches addiction treatment. If dementia is rising, and substance use contributes to cognitive vulnerability, then brain‑health education must become a core component of recovery support. Recovery capital has traditionally emphasised social networks, coping skills, employment, and housing. But cognitive preservation — protecting one’s future ability to think, remember, and live independently — is an equally vital resource.

Integrating long‑term brain‑health risks into treatment could strengthen relapse‑prevention frameworks, empower individuals with a clearer understanding of the stakes, and align addiction services with India’s broader public‑health priorities. It also reframes recovery not as crisis management, but as lifelong neuro-protection. 

As India confronts the dual rise of addiction and dementia, the treatment landscape must evolve. This is not about fear‑based messaging. It is about equipping people in recovery with the knowledge that their choices today can safeguard their autonomy, dignity, and cognitive well-being decades from now. When individuals understand that recovery is also an investment in their future selves, they gain a powerful and often missing form of motivation — one that can shape healthier lives and healthier ageing for millions.




This is only for your information, kindly take the advice of your doctor for food, medicines, exercises and so on.   















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