Last Updated:
January 30th, 2026
Addiction
Addiction is a recognised medical condition where something that starts as a choice becomes a compulsion. The easiest way to describe it is when a substance or behaviour controls you rather than the other way around. Understanding addiction means recognising it as a genuine illness like asthma or arthritis. This means that it can happen to anyone, regardless of background or willpower, and it also means that there is treatment available to anyone who needs it.

What is addiction?
Addiction is a condition where you continue using a substance or engaging in a behaviour despite serious negative consequences. Your brain adapts to expect whatever you’re addicted to, and stopping creates physical discomfort, psychological distress, or both. Over time, you need more to get the same effect, and life increasingly revolves around obtaining and using the substance or repeating the behaviour.
Repeated substance abuse and even activities like gambling can change brain chemistry and structure, particularly in areas governing reward, motivation, and self-control. These changes explain why people continue using substances or doing certain behaviours even when they genuinely want to stop.
Why does understanding addiction matter?
In England, more than 600,000 adults are dependent on alcohol, while drug-related deaths have reached record levels, with 5,565 registered in England and Wales in 2024. Alcohol harm alone costs England an estimated £27.44 billion annually, including £4.91 billion to the NHS. Drug misuse adds a further £10.7 billion in costs from healthcare, crime, and lost productivity.
These addiction statistics represent real people, and crucially, not just the person with the addiction. Families are left dealing with constant crisis, children grow up in chaos, and countless others are left vulnerable due to the strain addiction places on healthcare systems and other social services.
What are the types of addiction?
Addiction falls into two broad categories: behavioural and substance addictions.
Drug Addiction
This covers illegal substances, including cannabis addiction, cocaine addiction, heroin addiction, crack cocaine addiction, ketamine addiction, MDMA addiction, and meth addiction. Different drugs create different patterns of addiction, some causing severe physical withdrawal and others intense psychological cravings.
Drug Addiction
Legal high addiction
This involves synthetic drugs designed to mimic illegal substances, and includes Benzo Fury addiction, Spice addiction, and mephedrone addiction. These drugs can be particularly dangerous because their chemical composition is unpredictable.
Legal high addiction
Alcohol addiction
This is the most common substance addiction in Britain. Alcohol is legal, socially accepted, and everywhere, which makes problem drinking easy to hide. Physical dependence develops with heavy regular use, and alcohol withdrawal can be medically dangerous and even life-threatening.
Alcohol addiction
Other Common Drugs Addiction
This includes psychoactive and plant-based substances such as ayahuasca, magic mushrooms, psilocybin, peyote, iboga, and DMT. Regular or unsupervised use can lead to psychological dependence and mental health risks. Treatment focuses on understanding use patterns and restoring stability.
Other Drugs Addiction
Prescription Drug Addiction
Medications prescribed for pain, anxiety, or sleep can all lead to addiction even when taken as they’re supposed to be. Prescription opioid addiction, benzodiazepine addiction, antidepressant addiction, stimulant addiction, and sleeping pill addiction are all common and potentially very dangerous.
Prescription Drug Addiction
Behavioural Addiction
This is also called “process addiction”, and while it doesn’t involve substances, it follows the same patterns of compulsion and loss of control. Gambling addiction is the most recognised, but sex addiction, gaming addiction, and compulsive buying addiction can be equally destructive.
Substance addiction can involve countless legal and illegal substances.
What are the signs of addiction?
Recognising the signs of addiction early improves the chances of successful treatment. Addiction symptoms vary by substance and individual, but certain patterns appear consistently:
Psychological addiction signs
- Constant preoccupation with the substance or behaviour
- Finding it difficult to focus on anything else
- Mood changes like irritability, anxiety, or depression, when not using
- Addiction denial in the face of clear and obvious issues
Physical and behavioural addiction signs
- Changes in sleep patterns, appetite, weight, and appearance
- Neglecting responsibilities
- Withdrawing from friends and family
- Lying about drugs, alcohol, or behaviours
- Legal, personal, or financial issues due to addiction
- Losing interest in activities that once mattered
- Continuing to use substances or do certain behaviours despite mounting problems at work, home, or with health.
What are the causes and risk factors of addiction?
We have come a long way in our understanding of addiction, and we now know that it develops through a combination of factors. No single cause explains why one person becomes addicted, but some of the most common causes include:
Side effects of addiction
Addiction affects every aspect of life, with both serious short- and long-term risks.
Treatment and support options for addiction
The earlier that addiction is addressed, the better the outcomes.Required treatment also tends to be shorter and more successful when problems are caught early. The three main stages of treatment are:
1. Detox
Alcohol detox and drug detox provide medical supervision whilst your body clears out all the substance and breaks its dependence on substances. There are both illegal and prescription drug detox programmes available, but all require careful medical planning.
2. Rehab
This includes alcohol rehab, drug rehab, prescription drugs rehab, and behavioural rehab to address the psychological aspects of addiction. Programmes usually range from 10-day package options to a 28-day package or a 90-day package. Specialist programmes may also cater to specific groups, including rehab for professionals and rehab for teenagers.
3. Ongoing support
At the end of a treatment programme, you will usually work on relapse prevention strategies to help you recognise triggers and maintain progress. Post-treatment, getting local support through groups like AA Meetings, NA Meetings, or Gamblers Anonymous provides community and accountability for many years to come.
Finding help for addiction
Recovery.org can help you understand your options and find appropriate treatment. If you or someone you care about is struggling, contact us today to talk through your situation.
Frequently Asked Questions
(Click here to see works cited)
- Anand, Akhil. “Is Addiction Genetic?” Cleveland Clinic, 28 June 2022, health.clevelandclinic.org/is-addiction-genetic.
- Institute of Alcohol Studies. “Economy.” Institute of Alcohol Studies, 11 July 2025, www.ias.org.uk/factsheet/economy/.
- Office for National Statistics. “Deaths Related to Drug Poisoning in England and Wales: 2024 Registrations.” ONS, 16 Oct. 2025, www.ons.gov.uk/peoplepopulationandcommunity/birthsdeathsandmarriages/deaths/bulletins/deathsrelatedtodrugpoisoninginenglandandwales/2024registrations.
- UK Government. “Estimates of Alcohol Dependent Adults in England: Summary.” GOV.UK, 14 Mar. 2024, www.gov.uk/government/publications/alcohol-dependence-prevalence-in-england/estimates-of-alcohol-dependent-adults-in-england-summary.
- UK Health Security Agency. “Tools for Assessing Value for Money for Alcohol and Drug Treatment.” GOV.UK, 25 July 2016, ukhsa.blog.gov.uk/2016/07/25/tools-for-assessing-value-for-money-for-alcohol-and-drug-treatment/.

