Historical Overview of Drug use
in America (and around the world)
(See: Drugs
in American Society, 5th, 6th, 7th, 8th, and 9th editions, Erich Goode, McGraw-Hill,
1999/2005/2008/2012/2014. Chapters 1, 4 ,12, 2) Statistics are gathered from the various surveys discussed, especially: Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration, Results from the 2013 National Survey on Drug Use and Health: Summary of National Findings, NSDUH Series H-48, HHS Publication No. (SMA) 14-4863. Rockville, MD: Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration, 2014.
Long
History of Drug Use in Human Societies
Drug
Use is a Cultural Universal
- Only
Inuit Eskimos have no record of traditional Drug use
- And, this changed when
contact with Europeans was established
- Most, if not all, societies
integrate drug use into accepted, sometimes ritualistic, cultural patterns
of behavior
- Drug use seems to be
a vital part of everyday social interaction
Use
of Psychoactive Substances is MASSIVE in Modern Society
Drug
Use Prior to the Twentieth Century
Medicine
and Medicinal Drug Use in the 19th Century
Primitive Techniques
- Limited access to drugs (opiates
were the primary source of pain management, when available). Alcohol was also
commonly used. In particular, the use of opiates masked the symptoms of most
illnesses, providing the false impression of curing.
- Brutal surgeries and amputations
(no antiseptic technique). Ignaz
Semmelweis (Hungarian physician) advocated hand washing to prevent spread
of infections in the 1850s. His work was ignored until the 1890s.
- "Patent
Medicines" (see more)
- Opium, Morphine, Marijuana, and
Cocaine widely available.
Innovations
Users
- No accurate data
- Estimates of narcotic "addicts"
in 1900 range from 100,000-500,000. Best estimates 250,000 (Musto) and 313,000
(Courtwright). (US population 12 years and older: 54,700,000): .57%. Today (2016), population
12 years and older: 267,700,000, .04% report past year use of heroin. 4% report past month miuse of pain relievers.
- User Groups:
- Medical/quasi-medical use:
white, middle aged, middle class, women (largest group)
- Opium smokers (Chinese immigrants)
- Criminal Sub-culture (morphine)
- Cocaine users: 80,000
Early Legislation
- Opium Control and Chinese Immigrants
- Pure
Food and Drug Act
- Concerns over patent medicines
(popular magazines)
- Upton Sinclair's The
Jungle, 1906 (see also and this video).
- Congress passes act to ban interstate
commerce in adulterated or misbranded food or drugs.
- Passing the act created the
Food
and Drug Administration (FDA)
- Did not ban patent medicine
or other drugs, merely required labeling, and government oversight. There
was no focus on safety or effectiveness of medicinal compounds, either.
- FDA
Today
- Shanghai Commission (The
International Opium Commission), 1909
- Opium
Wars and trade with China (huge market)
- US possession of The Philippines
(1898) following the Spanish-American War: banned opium in 1905 (chinese
residents) and 1908 (all residents).
- Growing concern over the opium
trade.
- Thirteen countries meet. US
delegation (Dr.
Hamilton Wright: "father of American narcotic laws") presents
information on the dangers of narcotics.
- Wright drafts a bill (Foster
bill) to regulate opiates, cannabis, cocaine, etc. here in the US.
- Hague Conference (International
Conference on Opium) convenes in 1911. Again the US pushes for stricter
controls (although none existed in the US).
- Afterwards, push is on to enact
domestic laws--The Harrison Act.
- See, "THE
HISTORY OF LEGISLATIVE CONTROL OVER OPIUM, COCAINE, AND THEIR DERIVATIVES"
by David Musto
- Harrison
Act, 1914: "the single most important piece of drug legislation ever
enacted in the United States." (Goode, 2005, page 97)
- Aftermath:
- Narcotic
Maintenance Clinics (1918-1923)
- 30,000 physicians arrested
between 1914-1938
- Narcotic addiction became
a criminal offense.
- Emergence/solidification
of a criminal subculture (starts prior to Harrison Act)
- David Courtwright: decline
in narcotic addiction occurred between 1895 and 1915 based on voluntary
changes in the way physicians managed patients. This led to a proportional
increase in the underworld addict population, and following the Harrison
Act, and criminalization, led to the solidification of the heroin
using addict subculture (Congress passed a bill in 1924 specifically
banning heroin: Heroin Act). "Junkie" comes from the junk
collecting activity of NYC addicts in the 1920s--their method of supporting
themselves.
- Alcohol
Prohibition Movement (alcohol
laws today)
- Marijuana
Tax Act
- Thirty
Years of America's Drug War (from PBS)
- Johnson's administration 1968: Bureau of Narcotics (Treasury)
to Bureau
of Narcotics and Dangerous Drugs (Justice). Later: DEA
Nixon's Presidency
- Only president to focus on treatment
and prevention (budget 1/3 supply, 2/3 demand)
- Dole and Nyswander: Methadone
Maintenance
- Dr.
Jerome Jaffe (early methadone advocate, Illinois)--national policy
- Law and order: crime rate increase
and presidential secretary's purse snatching. Egil
Krogh, Mr. "Fix-It."
- Robert
DuPont: another methadone advocate (1969: links heroin use and crime based on drug testing arrestees in Washington D.C.).
- Nixon and the Controlled
Substances Act (1970)(Comprehensive Drug Abuse Prevention and Control Act)
- Supercedes all previous drug
legislation.
- 1971: Vietnam and heroin addiction (~4%
versus 10%). Drug Urinalysis Testing, "Operation Golden Flow".
- Nixon/Jaffe: SAODAP (1971): $155
million, $105 for treatment. "War on Drugs." (demand-side)
- 1972: $35 million to Turkey--stop
poppy production.
- Commission on Marijuana and
Drug Abuse 1972-1973 (also known as Shafer Commission)
- Decriminalize marijuana
- NIDA
- Delete word "abuse"
- Nixon ignores--"Bunch of do-gooders"
- "French
Connection." 1972: Crime down, heroin supplies low. Mexico, SE Asia, Iran,
and Afghanistan enter supply chain.
- 1973/1974: Federal anti-drug budget
$600 million (8x increase. addicts in treatment: over 80,000)
- Rockefeller in NY: harsh laws--focus
on punishment
- Nixon pushes for similar federal
laws. March 1973: The Heroin Trafficking Act.
- May 1973: BNDD--DEA.
- Alcohol, Drug Abuse, and Mental
Health Administration (ADAMHA) created to coordinate federal research
and treatment.
- Methadone program doing well,
but public opinion moving towards punishment
- Jaffee resigns, Dupont dismantles
SAODAP (geography--SAODAP was close to White House, NIDA, far away)
- 1972-1974: Watergate, Nixon
resigns (not much thought on drug policy)
- Ford takes office. Not much concern.
Methadone funding declines. White
Paper on Drug Abuse (can't eliminate drugs, but can reduce harm:
ignored)
- Shift to enforcement activities.
Budget: 50/50
- Start of massive increase
in incarcerations.
The Carter/Reagan-Bush Years
(1977-1992)
- Carter: Liberal, popular
- Peter
Bourne: Drug Advisor (treatment oriented, worked with Jaffee)
- Marijuana decriminalization movement
- 1976-1977: Schuchard
family incident. Dupont shifts to hard-line
- National opinion shifting--"parent's
Movement" formed
- Reverses opinion on marijuana,
it becomes the new target: Mexico
and Paraquat (scroll to middle of linked page)
- 1978: Bourne "busted"
(quaalude prescription and cocaine at NORML
party (2/3 down)). "Zero-tolerance" becomes
the rule.
- 1976-1980: illicit use rises.
11 states decriminalize marijuana
- 1980: Peak of use. Reagan elected
- Emphasis on enforcement. Budget
reverses: 1/3 treat, 2/3 enforcement.
- DuPont leads "zero-tolerance"
movement
- 1981: Carlton Turner appointed
drug advisor: All illegal drugs dangerous. Treatment encourages use.
- Federal spending on treatment
down 75%
- Nancy Reagan
- Bad press (extravagance)
- Picks up "Just say no"
from NIDA film. 1985: White-house
anti-drug event. Phrase picked up in press.
- Federal spending: 1/5 treatment,
4/5 enforcement
- 1983: DARE
program started by LAPD--quickly spreads to other cities, and receives federal
support.
- 1985-1986: Crack Panic (Len Bias,
Don Rodgers: cocaine deaths)
- Ed Koch in NYC: death penalty
(becomes life sentence for selling ~$50 of crack).
- Summer of 1986: Reagan: Nationwide
crusade against drugs.
- Anti-drug Abuse Act of 1986: overwhelmingly
approved. Major intensification of penalties. Death to traffickers, No longer
distinctions between "hard" and "soft" drugs, or "recreational"
use/abuse.
- Public opinion increasing harsh
(ironically reported drug use falling rapidly).
- George Bush (the elder) elected.
Carries on. William Bennett: Drug Czar.
- September 1989: 64% of Americans name drug
abuse number one problem (illicit use at historic low). Only 2% viewed
it as so problematic in April 1986.
1993-2000: Bill Clinton
- Smoked, but didn't inhale.
- Illicit use increases
- 1992: ADAMHA Reorganization: Transfers
NIDA, NIMH, and NIAAA to NIH and incorporates
ADAMHA's programs into the Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration
(SAMHSA)
- Federal anti-drug budget increases
ten fold ($1.5 billion in 1989--$18.5 billion in 2000)
- Gen.
Barry McCaffrey appointed Drug Czar. (1996)
- Arrests soar: 1,580,000 arrested
in 2000 (use approaching secondary plateau)
- Links drug use violation to termination
of federal education loans and grants
- November 1996: Proposition
215 in California: medicinal marijuana
- 1998: Refuses federal support for needle-exchange
- 1998
Tobacco Settlement
2001-2008: George W. Bush
- New Drug Czar (February 9, 2015:
Michael Botticelli ONDCP)
- Lot's of economic issues to address,
yet:
- 2012: Major Reorganization of NIDA and NIAAA into" "National Institute of
Substance Use and Addiction Disorders"? Perhaps the "government's
psychoactive research funding apparatus might recognize that there
is "use" that isn't "abuse"." (see, http://www.erowid.org/general/announce/monthly_2012-02.shtml)
- 2013: Colorado and Washington legalize marijuana for recreational use. Federal government not pursuing legal action against these states. City of St. Louis decriminalized 6/2013
- July 2015: 38 states and DC have
medicinal marijuana legislation (15 are CBD specific). States with full medical legalization: Alaska | Arizona | California | Colorado | Connecticut | Delaware | Hawaii | Illinois | Maine | Maryland | Massachusetts | Michigan | Minnesota (May 2014)| Montana | Nevada | New Hampshire | New
Jersey |New York| New Mexico | Oregon | Rhode Island | Vermont | Washington | and the the District of Columbia possession of 2 ounces or less carries no penalty. Federal: illegal--Schedule
I.
- 2014: America's New Drug Policy Landscape (Pew Research Center, April 2, 2014)
- May 2014: US House of Representitives stops federal prosecution of medical cannabis users in states, where it is legal. (Washington Times, May 30, 2014)
- December 2014: Prohibition of prosecution of medicinal marijuana is officially passed.
- March 2015: Marijuana Legalization?
- 2016: Heroin/Opioid use Epidemic?
- 2016: Facing Addiction in America: The Surgeon General's Report on Alcohol, Drugs, and Health. US Department of Health and Human Services. (local copy)
2017-2018: Trump Administration
- Jeff Sessions, Attorney General
- Tom Price, Health and Human Services (nope--he resigned), as of January 29, 2018, it's Alex Azar.
- DEA?
- ONDCP (Current Director: Tom Marino (nope--withdrew candidacy. Acting Director? or this guy?), replaced Michael Botticelli who was director under Obama)
- New War on Drugs?
- Trump announces "opiod emergency" (October 2017)--no funding. 2019 budget??
- January 2018: Trump's Attorney General Jeff Sessions rescinds "an Obama-era policy that discouraged federal prosecutors in most cases from bringing charges wherever the drug is legal under state laws". See: Savage, Charlie and Healy, Jack. "Trump Administration Takes Step That Could Threaten Marijuana Legalization Movement". New York Times, January 4, 2018. (local copy)
- Vermont is became the 9th state to legalize recreational use of cannabis, this time by legislative action versus popular vote (January 2018--effective June 2018).
A Danish translation: https://www.zoobio.se/teaching/2018/07/13/historisk-oversigt-af-brug-af-narkotika-i-usa-og-verden/, by Sandra Knudsen, July 2018.
Another
look at the history of American Drug Legislation
A
Social History of America's Most Popular Drugs (PBS
Frontline: Drug Wars, 2000)
Bias,
the Media, and Research
URL: http://www.umsl.edu/~keelr/180/drughistory.htm
Owner: Robert O. Keel rok@umsl.edu
References and
Credits for this Page of Notes
Last Updated:
Wednesday, July 18, 2018 9:12 AM