ABSTRACT
In 2015, U.S. government agencies began considering greater regulation of both homeopathic drugs and the advertising of such products. These actions came after more than a century of missed opportunities to regulate homeopathic medicines.
Subject(s)
Homeopathy/history , Legislation, Drug/history , Materia Medica/history , Government Regulation/history , History, 19th Century , History, 20th Century , History, 21st Century , Materia Medica/standards , United States , United States Food and Drug Administration/historyABSTRACT
Most likely, opium was the first narcotic substance discovered at the dawn of humankind. The history of drug addiction is immensely rich and allows for tracing the long way humankind had to travel to reach the contemporary level of consciousness with respect to narcotic substances. A retrospective view of drug addiction that takes into consideration the historical context, while extending our knowledge, also allows for a better understanding of today's problems. The report presents elements of a retrospective view of problems associated with addiction to opium, morphine and heroin over the centuries, what is a subject of scientific interest in contemporary toxicology.
Subject(s)
Illicit Drugs/history , Legislation, Drug/history , Opioid-Related Disorders/history , Opium/history , Global Health , Heroin/history , Heroin Dependence/history , History, 15th Century , History, 16th Century , History, 17th Century , History, 18th Century , History, 19th Century , History, 20th Century , History, 21st Century , History, Ancient , History, Medieval , Humans , Morphine/history , Morphine Dependence/history , Public OpinionABSTRACT
This article examines the debates about drug addiction, as presented by medical and non-medical reformers in Victorian Canada, to explain the emergence of anti-narcotic legislation in the early twentieth century. Most of the studies of drug prohibition in Canada emphasize the anti-Chinese issues surrounding the drafting of the 1908 Opium Act. This study asserts that in order to understand why parliament unanimously accepted this legislation, we must look beyond the issue of anti-Chinese sentiment. It explores the discussions of drug addiction rhetoric. It concludes that the concern over both addiction in Canada and the Chinese in Canada drew upon parallel issues of freedom versus slavery, racial purity, and the need to protect the integrity of a moral and strong nation.
Subject(s)
Asian People/history , Drug and Narcotic Control/history , Emigration and Immigration/history , Legislation, Drug/history , Opium/history , Public Health/history , Race Relations/history , Substance-Related Disorders/history , Canada , History, 19th Century , History, 20th Century , Humans , Pharmaceutical Preparations/historyABSTRACT
Between 1906 and 1917 China (under the Imperial and then Republican regimes) enacted a highly effective intervention to suppress the production of opium. Evidence from British Foreign Office records suggest that the intervention was centred, in many areas, upon a highly repressive incarnation of law enforcement in which rural populations had their property destroyed, their land confiscated and/or were publically tortured, humiliated and executed. Crops were forcefully eradicated and resistance was often brutally suppressed by the military. As few farmers received compensation or support for alternative livelihood creation the intervention pushed many deeper into poverty. Importantly, the repressive nature of the opium ban appears to have been a contributing factor to the fragmentation of China, highlighting the counter-productivity of repressive interventions to reduce drug crop production.
Subject(s)
Legislation, Drug/history , Opium/economics , Opium/history , China , History, 19th Century , History, 20th Century , Humans , Law EnforcementSubject(s)
Legislation, Drug/history , Opioid-Related Disorders/history , Opium/history , China , Heroin Dependence/epidemiology , Heroin Dependence/history , History, 16th Century , History, 17th Century , History, 18th Century , History, 19th Century , History, 20th Century , History, Ancient , Humans , Morphine Dependence/history , Opioid-Related Disorders/epidemiology , United StatesSubject(s)
Cannabis , Cocaine/history , Legislation, Drug/history , Opium/history , Cocaine/supply & distribution , History, 19th Century , History, 20th Century , Humans , International Cooperation , Opium/supply & distribution , Philippines , Substance-Related Disorders/history , Substance-Related Disorders/prevention & control , United StatesSubject(s)
Heroin , Costs and Cost Analysis , Crime , Efficiency , Heroin/history , Heroin Dependence/prevention & control , Heroin Dependence/rehabilitation , History, 19th Century , History, 20th Century , Humans , Legislation, Drug/history , Methadone/therapeutic use , Morals , Opium , Papaver , Plants, Medicinal , United Kingdom , United StatesABSTRACT
In the Japanese colonial state of Manchukuo, opiate addiction was condemned by officials and critics alike. But the state-sponsored creation of a monopoly, opium laws, and rehabilitation programs failed to reduce rates of addiction. Further, official media condemnation of opiate addiction melded with local Chinese-language literature to stigmatise addiction, casing a negative light over the state's failure to realise its own anti-opiate agenda. Chinese writers were thus transfixed in a complex colonial environment in which they applauded measures to reduce harm to the local population while levelling critiques of Japanese colonial rule. This paper demonstrates how the Chinese-language literature of Manchukuo did not simply parrot official politics. It also delegitimised Japanese rule through opiate narratives that are gendered, consistently negative, and more critical of the state than might be expected in a colonial literature.
Subject(s)
Colonialism , Health Promotion , Legislation, Drug , Opioid-Related Disorders , Rehabilitation , Social Control Policies , Social Dominance , China/ethnology , Colonialism/history , Health Promotion/economics , Health Promotion/history , Health Promotion/legislation & jurisprudence , Hierarchy, Social , History, 20th Century , Japan/ethnology , Language , Legislation, Drug/economics , Legislation, Drug/history , Local Government/history , Mass Media/economics , Mass Media/history , Mass Media/legislation & jurisprudence , Opioid-Related Disorders/economics , Opioid-Related Disorders/ethnology , Opioid-Related Disorders/history , Opioid-Related Disorders/psychology , Opium/economics , Opium/history , Public Health/economics , Public Health/education , Public Health/history , Public Health/legislation & jurisprudence , Public Policy/economics , Public Policy/history , Public Policy/legislation & jurisprudence , Publications/economics , Publications/history , Publications/legislation & jurisprudence , Rehabilitation/economics , Rehabilitation/education , Rehabilitation/history , Rehabilitation/legislation & jurisprudence , Rehabilitation/psychology , Social Control Policies/economics , Social Control Policies/history , Social Control Policies/legislation & jurisprudenceABSTRACT
In the mid-19th century, most American addicts were genteel women hooked on opiates through medical treatment. Within a few decades, a new group of addicts emerged--pleasure users who patronized opium dens. As local laws closed dens, the pleasure users--most often poor young men in northern cities--began experimenting with cocaine and heroin, causing an alarmed government to launch an escalating campaign to root out the new deviant subculture. Various treatment efforts were instituted, from short-lived clinics to federal narcotics farms. This drug use epidemic peaked in the 1920s and was essentially quelled by World War II. This paper briefly discusses differences between early British and US policies and the contemporary implications of this early drug use epidemic.
Subject(s)
Opioid-Related Disorders/history , Cocaine/history , Disease Outbreaks/history , Female , Heroin Dependence/history , History, 19th Century , History, 20th Century , Humans , Legislation, Drug/history , Male , Opioid-Related Disorders/epidemiology , Opium/history , United Kingdom , United States/epidemiologyABSTRACT
There are massive changes underway in the allocation of funds for health care in the United States which will impact upon services provided for users and misusers of intoxicating substances. Recent findings suggest that conditions in the marketplace and the development of professions have effected standards of care rather than a reasoned analysis of need and outcome. Psychologists question to what extent they will be involved in public policy issues including what is clinically and socially relevant. The goal of this paper was to determine if an historical perspective upon federal regulation of intoxicating substances (tobacco/alcohol/drugs) would enlighten the psychotherapy scientist in the pursuit of standards for service. The methodology included a review of the economic and social structure of colonial America which included tobacco plantations, breweries, and distilleries as well as a review of the formation of the federal government and political system in which men, women, and slaves were each assigned different performance standards/roles and economic rewards within the community. The implication is that potential for self-regulation and psychological development is based upon the legacy of our forefathers.