Press Enter to skip to the main content
Degrees Visit Apply
Blinn A-Z Calendars Catalog myBLINN
Blinn College For Mobile Devices
  • About
    • About
    • Administration
    • Accreditation
    • Affordability
    • Blinn A-Z
    • Board of Trustees
    • Campuses
    • Campus Maps
    • Catalog
    • Chancellor
    • Contact Blinn
    • Directory
    • Economic Impact
    • Employment Opportunities
    • Institutional Research and Effectiveness
    • Newsroom
  • Student Services
    • Student Services
    • Academic Advising
    • Activities Calendar
    • Business Office/Payment
    • Campus Safety
    • Career Services
    • Counseling Services
    • Disability Services
    • Financial Aid
    • Graduation Information
    • Housing and Residence Life (Brenham Campus)
    • Health Clinics
    • Meal Plans
    • Pregnancy and Parenting Services
    • Police and Emergency Management
    • Scholarships
    • Student Leadership/Activities
    • Title IX
    • Transcripts
    • Veteran Services
  • Future Students
    • Future Students
    • Academic Advising
    • Admissions
    • Application Steps
    • Contact a Recruiter
    • Course Registration
    • Housing and Residence Life
    • Immunization Information
    • Important Dates and Deadlines
    • International Students
    • New Student Registration
    • Placement Testing
    • Preview Day
    • Residency
    • Visit
  • Blinn College For Desktop Devices
  • Programs
    • Programs
    • Academic Affairs
    • Academic Calendar
    • Applied Technology and Workforce
    • Blinn Online
    • Catalog
    • Course Schedule
    • Dual Credit
    • Programs A-Z
    • Transfer Information
    • Instructional Leadership
  • Academic Resources
    • Academic Resources
    • Bookstore
    • Ecampus
    • Learning Center
    • Library
    • myBLINN
    • Testing Services
    • Tutoring Services
    • Writing Center
  • Community
    • Community
    • Alumni and Friends Association
    • Alumni Lettermen Association
    • Athletics
    • Blinn College Foundation
    • Box Office
    • Performing Arts Series
    • Rent Event Spaces
    • Small Business Development Center
    • Star of the Republic Museum
    • Visual and Performing Arts
  • Drug Free Schools and College Prevention Program Home
  • Resources
  • Drug and Alcohol Safety Awareness Events
  • Biennial Review
  • Community Alcohol &Substance Awareness Partnership
  • Health Risks
  • Legal Sanctions
  • College Penalties
  • College Policies Regarding Drugs and Alcohol
Drug Free Schools and College Prevention Program Home Resources Drug and Alcohol Safety Awareness Events Biennial Review Community Alcohol &Substance Awareness Partnership Health Risks Legal Sanctions College Penalties College Policies Regarding Drugs and Alcohol

Health Risks

Alcohol

Alcohol consumption causes a number of marked changes in behavior. Even low doses significantly impair the judgment and coordination required to drive a car safely. Low to moderate doses of alcohol also increase the incidence of a variety of aggressive acts. Moderate to high doses of alcohol cause marked impairments in higher mental functions, severely altering a person’s ability to learn and remember information. Very high doses cause respiratory depression and death. If combined with other depressants of the central nervous system, much lower doses of alcohol can lead to dependence. Sudden cessation of alcohol intake is likely to produce withdrawal symptoms, including severe anxiety, tremors, hallucinations, and convulsions. Alcohol withdrawal can be life-threatening. Long-term consumption of large quantities of alcohol can also lead to permanent damage to vital organs such as the brain and the liver. Females who drink alcohol during pregnancy may give birth to infants with fetal alcohol syndrome. These infants have irreversible physical abnormalities and mental retardation. In addition, research indicates that children of alcoholic parents are a greater risk than other youngsters of becoming alcoholics.

Tobacco (Nicotine)

The smoking of tobacco products is the chief avoidable cause of death in our society. Smokers are more likely than nonsmokers to contract heart disease. Some 30 percent of cancer deaths (130,000 per year) are linked to smoking. Chronic obstructive lung diseases such as emphysema and chronic bronchitis are 10 times more likely to occur among smokers than among nonsmokers. Smoking during pregnancy poses serious risks such as spontaneous abortion, preterm birth, low birth weights, and fetal and infant deaths. Perhaps the most dangerous substance in tobacco smoke is nicotine. Because nicotine is highly addictive, addicts find it very difficult to stop smoking. Of 1,000 typical smokers, fewer than 20 percent succeed in stopping on the first try.

Designer Drugs

Illegal drugs are defined in terms of their chemical formulas. To circumvent these legal restrictions, underground chemists modify the molecular structure of certain illegal drugs to produce analogs known as designer drugs. These drugs can be several hundred times stronger than the drugs they are designed to imitate. Many of the so-called designer drugs are related to amphetamines (MDMA, X). Bootleg manufacture creates overdose and contaminated risks. These substances can produce severe neurochemical damage to the brain. The narcotic analogs (fentanyl, china white) can cause symptoms such as those seen in Parkinson’s disease: uncontrollable tremors, drooling, impaired speech, paralysis, and irreversible brain damage. Analogs of amphetamines and methamphetamines cause nausea, blurred vision, chills or sweating, and faintness. Psychological effects include anxiety, depression, and paranoia. As little as one dose can cause brain damage. The analogs of phencyclidine cause illusions, hallucinations, and impaired perception.

Cocaine

Cocaine stimulates the central nervous system. The use of cocaine can cause death by cardiac arrest or respiratory failure. Its immediate effects include dilated pupils and elevated blood pressure, heart rate, respiratory rate, and body temperature. Occasional use can cause a stuffy or a runny nose, while chronic use can ulcerate the mucous membrane of the nose. Injecting cocaine with contaminated equipment can cause AIDS, hepatitis, and other diseases. Cocaine can produce psychological and physical dependency, a feeling that the user cannot function without the drug. In addition, tolerance develops rapidly. Crack or freebase rock is extremely addictive, and its effects are felt within 10 seconds. The physical effects include dilated pupils, increased pulse rate, elevated blood pressure, insomnia, loss of appetite, tactile hallucinations, paranoia, and

Other Stimulants

Stimulants can cause increased heart and respiratory rates, elevated blood pressure, dilated pupils, and decreased appetite. In addition, users may experience sweating, headache, blurred vision, dizziness, sleeplessness, and anxiety. Extremely high doses can cause a rapid or irregular heartbeat, tremors, loss of coordination, and even physical collapse. An amphetamine injection creates a sudden increase in blood pressure that can result in stroke, very high fever or heart failure. In addition to the physical effects, users report feeling restless, anxious, and moody. Higher doses intensify the effects. Persons who use large amounts of amphetamines over a long period of time can develop an amphetamine psychosis that includes hallucinations, delusions, and paranoia.

Anabolic Steroids

Anabolic steroids are a group of powerful compounds closely related to the male sex hormone testosterone. Steroid users subject themselves to more than 70 side effects ranging in severity from liver cancer to acne and including psychological as well as physical reactions. The liver and the cardiovascular and reproductive systems are most seriously affected by steroid use. In males, use can cause withered testicles, sterility, and impotence. In females, irreversible masculine traits can develop along with breast reduction and sterility. Psychological effects include very aggressive behavior known as “roid rage” and depression. While some side effects appear quickly, others, such as heart attacks and strokes, may not show up for years.

Narcotics

Narcotics initially produce a feeling of euphoria that often is followed by drowsiness, nausea, and vomiting. Users also may experience constricted pupils, watery eyes, and itching. An overdose may produce slow shallow breathing, clammy skin, convulsions, coma, and possible death. Tolerance to narcotics develops rapidly and dependence is likely. The use of contaminated syringes may result in diseases such as AIDS, endocarditis, and hepatitis. Addiction in pregnant women can lead to premature, stillborn, or addicted infants who experience severe withdrawal symptoms.

Marijuana

All forms of cannabis have negative physical and mental effects. Use of cannabis may impair or reduce short-term memory and comprehension, alter the sense of time and reduce the ability to perform tasks requiring concentration and coordination, such as driving a car. Research also shows that students do not retain knowledge when they are “high.” Motivation and cognition may be altered, making the acquisition of new information difficult. Marijuana can also produce paranoia and psychosis. Because users often inhale the unfiltered smoke deeply and then hold it in their lungs as long as possible, marijuana is damaging to the lungs and pulmonary system. Marijuana smoke contains more cancer-causing agents than tobacco smoke. Long-term users of cannabis may develop psychological dependence and require more of the drug to get the same effect. The drug can become the center of their lives.

Hallucinogens

Lysergic acid (LSD), mescaline, and psilocybin cause illusions and hallucinations. The physical effects may include dilated pupils, elevated body temperature, increased heart rate and blood pressure, loss of appetite, sleeplessness, and tremors. Sensations and feelings may change rapidly. It is common to have bad psychological reactions to LSD, mescaline, and psilocybin. The user may experience panic, confusion, suspicion, anxiety, and loss of control. Delayed effects or flashbacks, can occur even after use of ceased. Users of PCP report persistent memory problems and speech difficulties. Some of these effects may last 6 months to a year following prolonged daily use. Mood disorders-depression, behavior-also anxiety, behavior also occur. In later stages of chronic use, users often exhibit paranoid and violent behavior. Large doses may produce convulsions and coma, as well as heart and lung failure.

Depressants

The effects of depressants are in many ways similar to the effects of alcohol. Small amounts can produce calmness and relaxed muscles, but somewhat larger doses can cause slurred speech, staggering gait, and altered perception. Large doses can cause respiratory depression, coma, and death. The combination of depressants and alcohol can multiply the effects of the drugs, thereby multiplying the risks. The use of depressants can cause both physical and psychological dependence. Regular use over time may result in a tolerance to the drug, leading the user to increase the quantity consumed. When regular users suddenly stop taking large doses, they may develop withdrawal symptoms ranging from restlessness, insomnia, and anxiety to convulsions and death.

Inhalants

The immediate negative effects of inhalants include nausea, sneezing, coughing, nosebleeds, fatigue, lack of coordination, and loss of appetite. Solvents and aerosol sprays also decrease the heart and respiratory rates and impair judgment. Amyl and butyl nitrite cause rapid pulse, headaches, and involuntary passing of urine and feces. Long-term use may result in hepatitis or brain damage. Deeply inhaling the vapors, or using large amounts over a short time, may result in disorientation, violent behavior, unconsciousness, or death. High concentrations of inhalants can cause suffocation by displacing the oxygen in the lungs or by depressing the central nervous system to the point that breathing stops. Long-term use can cause weight loss, fatigue, electrolyte imbalance, and muscle fatigue. Repeated sniffing of concentrated vapors over time can permanently damage the nervous system.

Related Links

  • Board Policy Manual
  • Residence Life Handbook
  • Mental Health Counseling Services

Resources

  • Community Resources
  • CASAP Brochure
  • CCP Blinn Annual Implementation Plan 2020
  • CCP 2020-2024 Strategic Plan
PROGRAMS
VISIT
APPLY

The Blinn College District is accredited by the Southern Association of Colleges and Schools Commission on Colleges (SACSCOC) to award associate degrees. The Blinn College District also may offer credentials such as certificates and diplomas at approved degree levels. Questions about the accreditation of the Blinn College District may be directed in writing to the Southern Association of Colleges and Schools Commission on Colleges at 1866 Southern Lane, Decatur, GA 30033-4097, by calling (404) 679-4500, or by using information available on SACSCOC's website (www.sacscoc.org).

The Blinn College District does not discriminate on the basis of race, color, national origin, sex, or disability. For information regarding Title IX, ADA, Section 504, and other anti-discrimination coordinators, see the Student Title IX page.

quick links
  • A to Z Index
  • About Blinn College
  • Academic Calendar
  • Blinn Bookstores
  • Campus Maps
  • Choose your Campus
  • Contact Us
  • Directory
  • Employment Opportunities
  • Giving to Blinn
  • Library
  • myBLINN login
  • Social Media
resources
  • Access Syllabi & CVs
  • Curriculum Committee
  • Expressive Activity on Campus
  • Financial Transparency
  • House Bill 2504
  • Mental Health Counseling
  • Online Institutional Resumes
  • Open Records
  • Required Notices
  • State Auditor's Office Fraud, Waste, or Abuse Hotline
  • Student Complaint Forms
  • Student Consumer Information
  • Student Rights and Responsibilities
  • Student Title IX
  • Web Accessibility Statement
safety & security
  • Annual Security Report
  • Blinn Alert
  • Emergency Management
  • Police
  • Privacy Notice
  • Safety & Risk Management

departments
  • Accounting Department
  • Facilities, Planning, and Construction
  • Human Resources
  • Communications, Media Relations, and Marketing
  • Purchasing Department
Administration
  • Administration
  • Board of Trustees
  • Academic Committees
  • Administrative Regulations
  • Advisory Committees
  • Institutional Review Board
  • Legislative Matters
  • Office of Institutional Research and Effectiveness
  • Office of the Chancellor
  • Office of the Executive Vice Chancellor and General Counsel
  • Quality Enhancement Plan
  • Strategic Plan

©2025 Blinn College District | 902 College Avenue | Brenham, TX 77833 | 979-830-4000