Title: Drugs, Behavior, and Modern Society
1Drugs, Behavior, and Modern Society
- Chapter 1
- Drugs and Behavior Today
2TWO VIEWS OF DRUGS AND BEHAVIOR
- Focusing on specific substances that alter our
feelings, thoughts, perceptions, and behavior - Focusing on the circumstances in our lives that
lead to drug-taking behavior
3WHAT IS A DRUG?WHAT IS A PSYCHOACTIVE DRUG?
- Drug - A chemical substance that alters the
structure or functioning of the body, excluding
nutrients related to normal functioning - Psychoactive drug - influences the functioning of
the brain and hence behavior and experience
4TWO TYPES OF DRUG USE
- INSTRUMENTAL USE - taking a drug with a specific
socially-approved goal in mind. - RECREATIONAL USE - taking the drug for the sole
purpose of experiencing its psychoactive
properties (e.g., get high).
5FOUR CATEGORIES OF DRUG-TAKING BEHAVIOR
- Illicit drug/instrumental use
- Illicit drug/recreational use
- Licit drug/instrumental use
- Licit drug/recreational use
6HOW DO YOU DEFINE DRUG ABUSE AND DRUG MISUSE?
- Drug abuse drug-taking behavior that results in
some form of impairment - Drug misuse a prescription or nonprescription
(OTC) drug is used inappropriately
7DRUG USE IN ANCIENT TIMES
- Shamanism --- a practice of healing based on
trancelike states, frequently induced by
hallucinogenic drugs - Ebers Papyrus --- Egyptian document in 1500 B.C.,
containing more than 800 prescriptions for
common diseases
8DRUG USE IN ANCIENT TIMES
- 5000 B.C. The Sumerians use opium, suggested by
the fact that they have an ideogram for it which
has been translated as HUL, meaning "joy" or
"rejoicing." - 3500 B.C. Earliest historical record of the
production of alcohol the description of a
brewery in an Egyptian papyrus.
9DRUG USE IN ANCIENT TIMES
- 2000 B.C. Earliest record of prohibitionist
teaching, by an Egyptian priest, who writes to
his pupil "I, thy superior, forbid thee to go to
the taverns. Thou art degraded like beasts. - 350 B.C. Proverbs, 316-7 "Give strong drink to
him who is perishing, and wine to those in bitter
distress let them drink and forget their
poverty, and remember their misery no more."
10DRUG USE IN ANCIENT TIMES
- 4th century St. John Chrysostom (345-407), Bishop
of Constantinople "I hear man cry, 'Would there
be no wine! O folly! O madness!' - 450 Babylonian Talmud "Wine is at the head of
all medicines where wine is lacking, drugs are
necessary."
11DRUG USE IN ANCIENT TIMES
- c. 1000 Opium is widely used in China and the far
East. - 1493 The use of tobacco is introduced into Europe
by Columbus and his crew returning from America. - c. 1525 Paracelsus (1490-1541) introduces
laudanum, or tincture of opium, into the practice
of medicine.
12DRUG USE IN ANCIENT TIMES
- c. 1650 The use of tobacco is prohibited in
Bavaria, Saxony, and in Zurich, but the
prohibitions are ineffective. Sultan Murad IV of
the Ottoman Empire decrees the death penalty for
smoking tobacco "Whereever there Sultan went on
his travels or on a military expedition his
halting-places were always distinguished by a
terrible rise in executions. Even on the
battlefield he was fond of surprising men in the
act of smoking, when he would punish them by
beheading, hanging, quartering or crushing.
Nevertheless, in spite of all the horrors and
persecution. . . the passion for smoking still
persisted."
13DRUG USE IN ANCIENT TIMES
- 1789 The first American temperance society is
formed in Litchfield, Connecticut. - 1790 Benjamin Rush persuades his associates at
the Philadelphia College of Physicians to send an
appeal to Congress to "impose such heavy duties
upon all distilled spirits as shall be effective
to restrain their intemperate use in the
country." - 1792 The first prohibitory laws against opium in
China are promulgated. The punishment decreed for
keepers of opium shops is strangulation.
14DRUG USE IN ANCIENT TIMES
- 1792 The Whisky Rebellion, a protest by farmers
in western Pennsylvania against a federal tax on
liquor, breaks out and is put down by
overwhelming force sent to the area by George
Washington. Samuel Taylor Coleridge writes "Kubla
Khan" while under the influence of opium. - 1800 Napoleon's army, returning from Egypt,
introduces cannibis (hashish, marijuana) into
France. Avante-garde artists and writers in Paris
develop their own cannabis ritual, leading, in
1844, to the establishment of Le Club de
Haschischins.
15DRUG POLICY IN THE 19th CENTURY
- patent medicines, marketed through peddlers,
shops, or mail-order advertisements - many patent medicines contained opium or cocaine
- Laissez-faire hands-off philosophy - exerting
as little governmental control and regulation as
possible
16MAJOR DRUG REGULATORY LAWS 1906-PRESENT
- 1906 Pure Food and Drug Act
- 1914 Harrison Act
- 1919 Volstead Act (Prohibition)
- 1937 Marijuana Tax Act
- 1970 Comprehensive Drug Abuse Prevention and
Control Act - 1988 Anti-Drug Abuse Act
- 1996 Comprehensive Methamphetamine Act
- 2003 Illicit Drug Anti-Proliferation Act
- 2004 Anabolic Steroid Control Act
17DRUGS AND BEHAVIOR 1900-1945
- growing awareness of abuse potential of opiates,
particularly heroin (introduced in 1898) - enactment of regulatory laws for opiates and
cocaine (Harrison Act of 1914) - temperance movement gains political strength,
leading to National Prohibition of alcohol
(1920-1933) - enactment of regulatory laws for marijuana
(Marijuana Tax Act of 1937)
18DRUGS AND BEHAVIOR 1945-1960
- development of antibiotic drugs (penicillin,
streptomycin) for bacteria-borne infectious
diseases - development of chlorpromazine (Thorazine) for
treatment of schizophrenia - no public awareness that cigarette smoking or
alcohol consumption was drug-taking behavior
19DRUGS AND BEHAVIOR AFTER 1960
- use of marijuana, stimulants, and hallucinogens
becomes widespread in the 1960s, particularly
among college students - neuroscience research in the 1970s begins to
study relationship between brain and behavior - cocaine glamorized in the 1980s
- introduction of crack cocaine in 1985 extends
cocaine dependence to the inner cities of America
20PATTERNS OF DRUG USEU.S. HIGH SCHOOL
SENIORS1975-PRESENT
- Peak illicit drug use prevalence rates reached
about 1979 - A steady decline until about 1993
- A reversal upward from 1993 to about 2001, a slow
decline since - In 2005, 38 percent reported use of an illicit
drug over the previous year in 1979, this figure
was 54 percent.
21ILLICIT DRUG USE PREVALENCE RATES FOR U.S. HIGH
SCHOOL SENIORS IN 2005
- Over the previous 12 months
- Marijuana --- 34 percent
- Cocaine --- 5 percent
- MDMA (Ecstasy) --- 4 percent
- LSD --- 2 percent
22TRENDS IN ANNUAL PREVALENCE OF ILLICIT DRUG USE
1975-2005
23DRUG USE AMONG EIGHTH GRADERS
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25LICIT DRUG USE PREVALENCE RATES FOR U.S. HIGH
SCHOOL SENIORS IN 2005
- Over the previous 30 days
- Alcohol --- 47 percent
- Binge drinking --- 28 percent
- At least 1 cigarette every day --- 14 percent
- At least a half-pack every day --- 7 percent
26AVAILABILITY, RISK, AND PREVALENCE OF MARIJUANA
USE IN THE PAST MONTH AMONG HIGH SCHOOL SENIORS
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28LICIT DRUG USE PREVALENCE RATES
- 2004 NSDUH 6 million persons age 12 or older had
used prescription psychotherapeutic medications
non-medically in the prior month. This includes
4.4 million using pain relievers, 1.6 million
using tranquilizers, 1.2 million using
stimulants, and 0.3 million using sedatives - What about legitimate use of prescriptions?
29FACTORS DETERMINING THE LIKELIHOOD OF DRUG-TAKING
BEHAVIOR
- Risk factors increase the likelihood of
involvement with drugs - Protective factors decrease the likelihood of
involvement with drugs and reduce the impact of
any risk factor
30SPECIFIC RISK FACTORS FOR DRUG-TAKING BEHAVIOR
- irregular school attendance
- poor relationship with parents
- getting into trouble in general
- membership in a deviant subculture
- Note Economic hardship and parental abuse
not significant risk factors
31SPECIFIC PROTECTIVE FACTORS FOR DRUG-TAKING
BEHAVIOR
- intact and positive home environment
- positive educational experience
- conventional peer relationships
- positive attitudes and beliefs
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33PERCENTAGES OF 4 HIGH-RISK BEHAVIORS AS A
FUNCTION OF DEVELOPMENTAL ASSETS
34EXAMPLES OF CLUB DRUGS
- MDMA (Ecstasy, X)
- Gamma hydroxybutyrate (GHB)
- Lysergic acid diethylamide (LSD)
- Ketamine (K, Special K)
- Flunitrazepam (Rohypnol)
- Methamphetamine
35DIETARY SUPPLEMENTS
- commercial preparations derived from vitamins,
amino acids, or herbal extracts -
- manufacturers permitted to claim that products
can help with certain physical conditions - cannot be used to diagnose, treat, cure, or
prevent physical disease
36DIETARY SUPPLEMENTS
- Major examples androstenedione, creatine, gingko
biloba, ginseng, and St. Johns wort - Dietary Supplement Health and Education Act of
1994 stipulates that any claims have not been
evaluated by the U.S. Food and Drug
Administration.