ABSTRACT
There is documentation of the use of opium derived products in the ancient history of the Assyrians: the Egyptians; in the sixth century AD by the Roman Dioscorides; and by Avicenna (980-1037). Reference to opium like products is made by Paracelsus and by Shakespeare. Charles Louis Derosne and Fredrich Wilhelm Adam Serturner isolated morphine from raw opium in 1802 and 1806 respectively, and it was Sertürner who named the substance morphine, after Morpheus, the Greek God of dreams. By the middle 1800s, Opium and related opioid derived products were the source of a major addiction in USA, and to some extent in the United Kingdom. Opioid products are of major therapeutic value in the treatment of pain from injury, post surgery, intractable pain conditions, and some forms of terminal cancer.
Subject(s)
Analgesics, Opioid , Narcotics , Humans , Analgesics, Opioid/history , Morphine/history , Narcotics/history , Opium/historyABSTRACT
This article provides a history of three pharmaceuticals in the making of modern South Africa. Borrowing and adapting Arthur Daemmrich's term 'pharmacopolitics', we examine how forms of pharmaceutical governance became integral to the creation and institutional practices of this state. Through case studies of three medicaments: opium (late 19th to early 20th century), thalidomide (late 1950s to early 1960s) and contraception (1970s to 2010s), we explore the intertwining of pharmaceutical regulation, provision and consumption. Our focus is on the modernist imperative towards the rationalisation of pharmaceutical oversight, as an extension of the state's bureaucratic and ideological objectives, and, importantly, as its obligation. We also explore adaptive and illicit uses of medicines, both by purveyors of pharmaceuticals, and among consumers. The historical sweep of our study allows for an analysis of continuities and changes in pharmaceutical governance. The focus on South Africa highlights how the concept of pharmacopolitics can usefully be extended to transnational-as well as local-medical histories. Through the diversity of our sources, and the breadth of their chronology, we aim to historicise modern pharmaceutical practices in South Africa, from the late colonial era to the Post-Apartheid present.
Subject(s)
Contraceptive Agents/history , Drug and Narcotic Control/history , Government , Narcotics/history , Opium/history , Politics , Thalidomide/history , Apartheid/history , Colonialism/history , Contraception , History, 19th Century , History, 20th Century , History, 21st Century , Humans , Pharmaceutical Preparations/history , Social Control, Formal , South AfricaSubject(s)
Pain Management/history , Pain/history , Anesthesia/history , Anesthesia/methods , Animals , Aspirin/history , Brain/pathology , Brain/physiopathology , Cocaine/administration & dosage , Cocaine/history , Cocaine/therapeutic use , Complex Regional Pain Syndromes/history , Dental Caries/history , Dental Caries/therapy , Electric Stimulation Therapy/history , Endorphins/history , Endorphins/metabolism , Female , History, 17th Century , History, 18th Century , History, 19th Century , History, 20th Century , History, 21st Century , History, Ancient , Humans , Hyoscyamus , Isoquinolines/history , Isoquinolines/metabolism , Male , Mice , Microglia/physiology , Models, Psychological , Morphine/history , Morphine/pharmacology , Morphine/therapeutic use , Nerve Block/history , Neuroimaging/history , Nitrous Oxide/administration & dosage , Nitrous Oxide/history , Nitrous Oxide/pharmacology , Nociceptors/metabolism , Opium/history , Pain/physiopathology , Receptors, Dopamine/metabolism , Sex Characteristics , Spinal Puncture , T-Lymphocytes/physiologySubject(s)
Appendectomy/history , Appendicitis/history , Appendicitis/therapy , France , History, 19th Century , Humans , Opium/history , Opium/therapeutic use , United StatesABSTRACT
Histories of the Third Plague Pandemic, which diffused globally from China in the 1890s, have tended to focus on colonial efforts to regulate the movement of infected populations, on the state's draconian public health measures, and on the development of novel bacteriological theories of disease causation. In contrast, this article focuses on the plague epidemic in Hong Kong and examines colonial preoccupations with Chinese "things" as sources of likely contagion. In the 1890s, laboratory science invested plague with a new identity as an object to be collected, cultivated, and depicted in journals. At the same time, in the increasingly vociferous anti-opium discourse, opium was conceived as a contagious Chinese commodity: a plague. The article argues that rethinking responses to the plague through the history of material culture can further our understanding of the political consequences of disease's entanglement with economic and racial categories, while demonstrating the extent to which colonial agents "thought through things."
Subject(s)
Opioid-Related Disorders/history , Opium/history , Plague/history , Colonialism , History, 19th Century , History, 20th Century , Hong Kong , Humans , Opioid-Related Disorders/psychology , Opium/economics , Plague/economics , Plague/psychologyABSTRACT
The Opium Wars of 1839-1843 and 1856-1860 revealed the devastating effects of narcotic addiction on the health of the body politic of China. The defeated Qing dynasty lost effective sovereignty to the British, leaving it helpless against more than 100 years of exploitation by the European powers, the United States, and Japan. Today we see the same risk posed by prescription narcotics and illegal opioids imported from China that can be seen as retribution for the "Century of Humiliation" nearly two centuries ago.
Subject(s)
Analgesics, Opioid , Opium , Humans , United States , Opium/history , Narcotics , China , JapanABSTRACT
Gertrude Stein was not only a fairly open lesbian but also Jewish, expatriate, and androgynous-all attributes that often retarded mass-market success. Why then was she so popular? The article offers original research highlighting how Stein was constructed as a kind of "opium queen" in the popular American press, and the ways that this decadent, bohemian celebrity persona allowed her to operate as "broadly queer" rather than "specifically gay" in the American cultural imaginary-a negotiation that accounts for the mass-market success rather than censure of The Autobiography of Alice B. Toklas despite the unparalleled visibility of its lesbian erotics.
Subject(s)
Homosexuality, Female/history , Jews/history , Life Style/history , Literature, Modern/history , Mass Media/history , Medicine in Literature , Opium/history , Religion and Psychology , Female , History, 19th Century , History, 20th Century , Humans , United StatesABSTRACT
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
Cultivated in the Eastern Mediterranean region for millennia, the opium poppy (Papaver somniferum) was profoundly significant in the economies, ecologies, cultures, and diets of the peoples of many towns and villages of rural Anatolia. When the United States compelled Turkey to eradicate cultivation of the plant in the early 1970s in order to diminish the flow of heroin into America, farmers were obliged to deal with not only changes in their incomes but also profound changes in their relationships with the land and the state. Although Turkish officials later allowed production to resume in a highly controlled manner for pharmaceutical purposes, significant socioeconomic and ecological dimensions of Turkey's poppy-growing communities were forever changed. Interviewing now-retired poppy farmers, I employ oral history as my primary source of historical evidence to reconstruct these past ecologies and associated social relationships and to give voice to the informants.
Subject(s)
Cultural Characteristics , Economics , Opium , Rural Population , Socioeconomic Factors , Agriculture/economics , Agriculture/education , Agriculture/history , Cultural Characteristics/history , Cultural Diversity , Diet/economics , Diet/ethnology , Diet/history , Ecology/economics , Ecology/education , Ecology/history , Economics/history , Empirical Research , History, 20th Century , History, 21st Century , Interviews as Topic , Mediterranean Region/ethnology , Opium/economics , Opium/history , Papaver , Rural Population/history , Socioeconomic Factors/history , Turkey/ethnologyABSTRACT
Historical scholarship in traditional geopolitics often relied on documents authored by states and by other influential actors. Although much work in the subfield of critical geopolitics thus far has addressed imbalances constructed in official, academic, and popular media due to a privileging of such narratives, priority might also be given to unearthing and bringing to light alternative geopolitical perspectives from otherwise marginalized populations. Utilizing the early-1970s case of the United States' first "war on drugs," this article examines the geopolitics of opium-poppy eradication and its consequences within Turkey. Employing not only archival and secondary sources but also oral histories from now-retired poppy farmers, this study examines the diffusion of U.S. antinarcotics policies into the Anatolian countryside and the enduring impressions that the United States and Turkish government created. In doing so, this research gives voice to those farmers targeted by eradication policies and speaks more broadly to matters of narcotics control, sentiments of anti-Americanism, and notions of democracy in Turkey and the region, past and present.
Subject(s)
Agriculture , Economics , Illicit Drugs , Narcotics , Opium , Political Systems , Agriculture/economics , Agriculture/history , Economics/history , History, 20th Century , History, 21st Century , Humans , Illicit Drugs/economics , Illicit Drugs/history , Narcotics/economics , Narcotics/history , Opium/economics , Opium/history , Papaver , Political Systems/history , Population Groups/education , Population Groups/ethnology , Population Groups/history , Population Groups/legislation & jurisprudence , Population Groups/psychology , Public Health/economics , Public Health/education , Public Health/history , Public Health/legislation & jurisprudence , Social Change/history , Turkey/ethnology , United States/ethnologyABSTRACT
This study examines India and Turkey as case studies relevant to the Senlis Council's 'poppies for medicine' proposal. The proposal is that Afghan farmers are licensed to produce opium for medical and scientific purposes. Here it is posited that the Senlis proposal neglects at least three key lessons from the Turkish and Indian experiences. First, not enough weight has been given to diversion from licit markets, as experienced in India. Second, both India and Turkey had significantly more efficient state institutions with authority over the licensed growing areas. Third, the proposal appears to overlook the fact that Turkey's successful transition was largely due to the use of the poppy straw method of opium production. It is concluded that, while innovative and creative policy proposals such as that of the Senlis proposal are required if Afghanistan is to move beyond its present problems, 'poppies for medicine' does not withstand evidence-based scrutiny.
Subject(s)
Agriculture , Cross-Cultural Comparison , Economics , Opium , Papaver , Plants, Medicinal , Afghanistan/ethnology , Agriculture/economics , Agriculture/education , Agriculture/history , Economics/history , Economics/legislation & jurisprudence , Government Programs/economics , Government Programs/education , Government Programs/history , Government Programs/legislation & jurisprudence , History, 20th Century , History, 21st Century , India/ethnology , Opium/economics , Opium/history , Turkey/ethnologyABSTRACT
For thousands of years, opium was the main remedy against pain. Its analgesic properties have been known since antiquity, as well as its stupefacient, narcotic and addictive effects. A countless number of opiate galenical preparations had already been formulated by the beginning of our era. The best-known were electuaries, complex drugs combining multiple active substances, essentially plant-based, used to obtain beneficial effects for different aliments. These universal remedies were panaceas. Sonne opium--or opiate--based electuaries were recommended as antidotes to poison or snake venom. The best-known, Mithridate and Theriac Andromache (Venice Treacle), the latter also containing viper flesh, combined up to a hundred or so ingredients. However, this polypharmacy was criticized and it was an English doctor, Thomas Sydenham, to whom we owe the preparation of a liquid laudanum which was easier to administer than an electuary. Sydenham's laudanum (1683) was adopted by ail the pharmacopeias. Later, based on a traditional research approach, pharmacists attempted to isolate the active principles of opium. Seguin, but above ail the German pharmacist Sertürner (in 1805 and 1817) isolated morphine. Organic chemists took over from the analysts, and morphine derivatives were obtained by hemi-synthesis (heroin), and then central analgesics, or opioids, by total synthesis. Opium is no longer seen as the only supreme remedy for painful disorders, and its galenic forms have gradually disappeared from pharmacopeias.
Subject(s)
Analgesics, Opioid/history , Pharmacopoeias as Topic/history , France , History, 17th Century , History, 18th Century , History, 19th Century , History, Ancient , History, Medieval , Opium/historyABSTRACT
Urial K. Mayo (1816-1900) was a successful Boston dentist who was plagued by personal scandal. In 1883 he patented extending the duration of nitrous-oxide anesthesia with an alcoholic tincture of hops and poppies.
Subject(s)
Anesthesia, Dental/history , Anesthetics, Inhalation/history , Nitrous Oxide/history , Opium/history , Anesthetics, Inhalation/chemistry , Ethanol/history , History, 19th Century , Humans , Humulus , Papaver , Solvents/history , United StatesABSTRACT
In September 2020, the International Agency for Research on Cancer (IARC) announced that opium consumption causes cancer in humans - a conclusion drawn after reviewing data from five decades of research. Given the widespread use of opium and its derivatives by millions of people across the world, the classification of opium consumption as a "Group 1" carcinogen has important public health ramifications. In this mini-review, we offer a short history of opium use in humans and briefly review the body of research that led to the classification of opium consumption as carcinogenic. We also discuss possible mechanisms of opium's carcinogenicity and potential avenues for future research.
Subject(s)
Neoplasms/chemically induced , Opioid-Related Disorders/complications , Opium/history , Biomedical Research/trends , Carcinogenesis , History, 19th Century , History, 20th Century , History, 21st Century , History, Ancient , HumansABSTRACT
According to the opium law and prescription statute of 1930, physicians were duty-bound to maintain a stock ledger to allow a traceable record of the location of narcotic drugs. If a simplification of the prescription of opiates was welcomed 10 years ago then 2 years after amendment of the addictive drugs statute thought should be give to safe use, as can be concluded from a morphine logbook from the time of the introduction of the Federal opium law. "Receipt and issue... deliverer and recipient" must be able to be extracted from the documentation, which means the delivery and the dispensing but not the individual application.
Subject(s)
Analgesics, Opioid/history , Cocaine/history , Documentation/history , Drug Prescriptions/history , Drug and Narcotic Control/history , Morphine/history , Opium/history , Germany , History, 20th Century , HumansSubject(s)
Analgesics, Opioid/history , Cocaine/history , Drug Prescriptions/history , Heroin/history , Opium/history , Pharmacies/history , Analgesics, Opioid/supply & distribution , Cocaine/supply & distribution , Drug Prescriptions/statistics & numerical data , England , Female , Heroin/supply & distribution , History, 19th Century , History, 20th Century , Humans , Male , Opium/supply & distribution , Sex Characteristics , Socioeconomic FactorsABSTRACT
This paper aims to critically appraise the incorporation of opium poppy into medical practice in Song-dynasty China. By analysing materia medica and formularies, along with non-medical sources from the Song period, this study sheds light on the role of Chinese Buddhist monasteries in the process of incorporation of foreign plants into Chinese medicine. It argues that Buddhist monasteries played a significant role in the evolution of the use of opium poppy in Song dynasty medicine. This is because the consumption practices in Buddhist monasteries inspired substantial changes in the medical application of the flower during the Southern Song dynasty. While, at the beginning of Song dynasty, court scholars incorporated opium poppy into official materia medica in order to treat disorders such as huangdan and xiaoke , as well as cinnabar poisoning, this study of the later Song medical treatises shows how opium poppy was repurposed to treat symptoms such as diarrhoea, coughing and spasms. Such a shift in the medical use of the poppy occurred after Chinese literati and doctors became acquainted with the role of the flower in the diet and medical practices of Buddhist monks across China. Therefore, the case study of the medical application of opium poppy during the Song dynasty provides us with insights into how the spread of certain practices in Buddhist monasteries might have contributed to the change in both professional medical practices and daily-life healthcare in local communities in that period.