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A History of Drug Abuse and Addiction in the U.S. Sue Rusche, Co-director Addiction Studies Program. History of addictive drugs in the U.S. Marked by a recurring pattern Widespread use Problems develop Reform/Laws. Opiates. Widespread use in 19 th century
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A History of Drug Abuse and Addiction in the U.S. Sue Rusche, Co-director Addiction Studies Program
History of addictive drugs in the U.S. • Marked by a recurring pattern • Widespread use • Problems develop • Reform/Laws
Opiates • Widespread use in 19th century • Primarily middle-, upper-middle-income women, Civil War soldiers • Problems develop • Highest levels of opiate addiction in history • Reform/Laws • Passed in states • Lead to Harrison Narcotics Act of 1914
Alcohol: Cycle 1 • Widespread use 19th, early 20th century • Primarily men, all income levels • Problems develop • Addiction • Breakup of families, other social problems • Reform/laws • Passed in states • Lead to Prohibition
Alcohol: Cycle 2 • Widespread use • Prohibition repealed 1933 • Use highest by 1980 after period when states lowered drinking age to 18 • Problems develop • Highest ever rates of drunk-driving deaths, especially among adolescents • 100,000 deaths per year • Reform/laws • States raise drinking-age to 21 • Pass anti-drunk driving laws
Cigarettes/Tobacco • Widespread use • 0 cigarettes per person/1860 • 4,345 cigarettes per person/1963 • Problems develop • Up to 500,000 deaths per year • Reform/laws • Local anti-smoking laws in public places • State lawsuits result in Tobacco Settlement Act
Medicines: Cycle 1 • Widespread use • Little understanding of disease • Only medicines were potions, elixirs • Problems develop • Most medicines either worthless or harmful • Reform/laws • Public concern leads to Pure Food & Drug Act 1906
Medicines: Cycle 2 • Widespread use • Dietary Supplement Health and Education Act of 1994 • Dietary supplements exempt from FDA control • Problems develop • i.e. Ephedrine • Reform/laws • Under consideration
Impossible to talk about medicines without talking about addictive drugs • Addictive drugs have been used as medicines throughout history • Opium and heroin • Cocaine • Cannabis • Alcohol
Put in perspective. . . • Anesthetics not developed until 1840s • Modern pharmaceuticals, medical procedures developed even later
Pre-1840s “anesthetics” • Got patients very drunk • Knocked them out with blows to the head • Hired several large men to hold them down
Advances in chemistry, technology: • Morphine isolated from opium (early 1800s) • Cocaine extracted from coca leaf (mid-1800s) •Hypodermic needle invented (mid-1800s)
Opiate addiction spread in last half of 19th century via: • Medical administration Doctors gave morphine to relieve symptoms, treat gynecological problems and “nervousness” in women who could afford doctors • Civil War Doctors gave morphine to treat Civil War injuries • Self-administration via patent medicines
Opiate addiction spread, cont. • Medical use to “cure” addiction Denarco, Opacura • Non-medical administration Opium smoking, eating
U.S. importation of crude opium quadrupled in last half of 19th century
Absence of regulation • No labeling requirements • People unaware of what they were taking • Addiction spread
No requirements for safety, efficacy • Anyone could produce, sell “medicines” • Unsafe • Ineffective • Made curative claims without benefit of scientific proof
By early 1900s, medical consensus developed: • Opiates, other drugs overly prescribed • Sold to unsuspecting customers & produced addiction • Worthless patent “medicines” being sold • Controls needed
Public pressure for controls mounts • States pass laws to • Control opiates, cocaine, other addictive drugs • End sale of worthless “medicines”
Federal Pure Food and Drug Act of 1906 (& subsequent amendments) • Food, drugs pure • Contents labeled • Drugs must be safe and effective • Food and Drug Administration
Harrison Act of 1914 (& subsequent laws) • First law to control opiates, cocaine, other drugs • Subsequent laws attempt to balance • Use in medicine with potential for abuse • Marijuana Tax Act of 1937 • Adds cannabis
High levels of alcohol use, problems in 1800s • Similar effort to control alcohol • States passed prohibition laws • 1851-1865
US Internal Revenue Act of 1862 • Taxed alcohol to raise money for Civil War • Raised up to half of U.S. internal revenue between 1870 and 1915
Volstead Act (1919) • Codified 18th Amendment to U.S. Constitution (Prohibition) • Results: • Lowest levels of alcohol consumption • Lowest levels of cirrhosis deaths
Support diminished as • Illegal supplies increased • Wood alcohol poisoning deaths increased • Business leaders believed alcohol tax would replace personal, corporate income tax • U.S. repeals Prohibition in 1933
Nicotine: addictive drug that escaped control until today • Tourists introduced cigarettes from Europe in 1850s • Once introduced, use spread
Government taxed cigarettes • To raise money for Civil War • Mass production & mass marketing led to enormous growth in production and sales
First scientific study linked cigarettes, lung cancer -- 1937 • By 1960s, conclusive evidence that smoking causes • Lung cancer • Heart disease • Emphysema • Many other cancers