Title: The War on Drugs: Methamphetamine, Public Health and Crime
1The War on Drugs Methamphetamine, Public Health
and Crime
- Carlos Dobkin, Nancy Nicosia
2Background on Methamphetamine
- Methamphetamine is typically sold in powdered
form. It is usually inhaled, but may also be
ingested orally or injected. - Slows dopamine uptake and creates a euphoric
state - Some users experience violent and psychotic
episodes - Hallucinations, paranoia, depression
- Some users experience adverse physical symptoms
- Chest pains, headaches
- Users surveyed in Queensland reported committing
both property and violent crimes.
3Methamphetamine Abuse Is a Growing Problem in the
U.S.
- In the 1980s methamphetamine was used primarily
by adult white males in western states - Use is increasing among minorities, women and
high school students - Nearly one-third of state and local enforcement
agencies surveyed in 2003 rated methamphetamine
as one of the greatest drug threats in their area
(NDIC 2003) - There has been lots of attention to the
methamphetamine problem in the press. (e.g.
NYTimes 2/10/2005)
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6The Government Has Three Strategies to Curb
Illegal Drug Use
- Prevention Education and community action
- Discourage people from starting to use drugs
- 2B budget in 2005
- Demand side intervention
- Treatment Programs for drug users
- Get people who use drugs to stop
- 4B budget in 2005
- Demand side intervention
- Enforcement Reduce Availability
- 6B budget in 2005
- Supply side intervention
- Unlike treatment and prevention experimental
evaluation is not feasible
7Goals of this Study
- Examine the impact of an extremely successful DEA
enforcement effort in the methamphetamine
precursor market on - Price and purity of methamphetamine
- Hospitalizations and drug treatment admissions
for methamphetamine - Property crime, violent crime and drug crime
8Evidence of the Effect of Reducing
Methamphetamine Supply
- Cunningham and Liu (2003) find that regulation of
precursors reduces methamphetamine
hospitalizations. - Abt Associates (2000) find that a 1 increase in
methamphetamine prices reduces consumption by
1.48 - Numerous studies of price elasticity of cocaine
and heroin in U.S. (DiNardo 1993, Yuan and
Caulkins 1998, Caulkins 2000 ) - These studies have some limitations
- They are identified of changes in price with
unknown sources. - They typically use data aggregated to the year
and state level potentially masking temporary or
local changes. - They do not examine the direct effect of
enforcement on outcomes of interest such as crime
and adverse health events.
9Methamphetamine Production Is Dependent on
Precursor Availability
- Methamphetamine is cooked in illegal drug labs
using either ephedrine or pseudoephedrine as a
precursor - Ephedrine or pseudoephedrine have many legal
uses. - Over the counter medicine such as Sudafed and
Tylenol Cold contain pseudophedrine - The DEA works to keep these chemicals from
getting diverted to illegal uses
10Significant Precursor Legislation (1989-2000)
- October 1989 Chemical Diversion and Trafficking
Act - Regulated bulk ephedrine and pseudoephedrine
- August 1995 Domestic Chemical Diversion Control
Act (DCDCA) - Removes the record keeping and reporting
exemption for single entity ephedrine products. - October 1996 Methamphetamine Control Act
- Regulates access to over the counter medicines
containing ephedrine. - October 1997 Methamphetamine Control Act
- Regulates products containing pseudoephedrine or
phenylpropanolamine - July 2000 The Methamphetamine Anti-Proliferation
Act - Establishes thresholds for pseudoephedrine drug
products.
11Significant Precursor Interventions Resulted from
the DCDCA
- Two large interventions occurred in May 1995
- Clifton Pharmaceuticals 25 metric tons of
ephedrine and pseudoephedrine - Xpressive Looks International Distributed about
830 million ephedrine tablets (over 18 months) - Scale of two interventions is enormous
- Production potential was 29 metric tons of
methamphetamine - DEA seized only 762 kilograms of methamphetamine
in 1994 (DEA STRIDE) - ONDCP estimated total methamphetamine consumption
was 34.1 metric tons in 1994
12Our Analysis Relies on Detailed Data from a
Variety of Sources
- Census of DEA seizures purchases
- Census of California hospitalizations
- Census of drug treatment admissions in California
- Survey and drug test of a non random sample of
arrestees for three California cities - Monthly reported crimes and arrests in California
by jurisdiction
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25The Interventions Resulted in Temporary Changes
in Prices, Purity, and Adverse Health Outcomes
- There was a large though temporary increase in
prices - Price increased from 30 to 100
- Prices returned to pre-intervention levels within
four months - There was an enormous and longer-lasting impact
on purity - Purity declined from 90 to 20
- Purity required 18 months to recover to near
pre-intervention levels - There was a substantial decline in adverse health
outcomes associated with methamphetamine - Amphetamine-related hospitalizations declined by
50 - Methamphetamine-related treatment admissions
declined by 35 - Changes in health outcomes track the purity
rather than prices
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32Some Evidence of Substitution to Other Drugs
- Poly drug use is high among arrestees
- Methamphetamine users also use cocaine, heroin
and marijuana - There is some evidence that some methamphetamine
users are switching to cocaine and heroin - Decline in cocaine purity
- Increase in positive cocaine and heroin tests
among arrestees who reported ever using
methamphetamine - Still a very large overall reduction in drug use
33There is Evidence of an Association Between
Methamphetamine Use and Crime
- Drug use is common among people arrested for
property crimes, violent crimes and drug crimes - Proportion of arrestees testing positive for
methamphetamine for all three crime categories
drops as a result of the intervention. - How a reduction in methamphetamine supply might
impact crime rates is not clear - Property crime may rise or fall depending on the
price elasticity of consumption - Violent crime due to the pharmacological effects
of methamphetamine may fall - Violent crime due to the enforcement of property
rights may fall - Drug crime arrests for possession and sale are
likely to fall as there are fewer transactions to
conduct
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50The 1995 DEA Intervention Had a Large, Temporary
Impact on Adverse Outcomes
- Price jumped from 30 per gram to 100 per gram
and Purity declined from 90 to 20 - Hospital admissions for methamphetamine declined
by 50 - Treatment admissions for methamphetamine declined
by 35 - Methamphetamine use declined by 55 among
arrestees and some arrestees switched to cocaine
and heroin. - Felony arrests for Dangerous Drugs declined by
50 - Misdemeanor arrests for Other Drug Laws
declined by 25 - The decrease in methamphetamine availability may
have slightly reduced larcenies and motor vehicle
thefts - No discernable reduction in violent crime
51Conclusions
- Supply interdictions can reduce the rates of
adverse health outcomes - A reduction in drug supply will result in a
reduction in the number of drug arrests - Supply interdictions may reduce some property
crimes specifically larceny and motor vehicle
thefts. - Lack of a large impact on violent crime or
property crime suggests either - Methamphetamine consumption does not cause large
amounts of these crimes or - Interdiction may not be an effective way of
reducing the crime caused by methamphetamine use - Despite this enormous success on the part of DEA
the supply of methamphetamine recovered fairly
rapidly.