Narcotics
(See:Drugs in American Society, 5th, 6th, 7th, 8th, and 9th editions, Erich Goode, McGraw-Hill, 1999/2005/2008/2012/2014. Chapter 11/10/12 and Drugs, Society, and Human Behavior, Ray and Ksir, Mosby, 1993 (and 2004). Chapter 14;
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.)

Opiates

"Can anybody lend me a dime?"

The HARD Drugs!

(Erowid, From the Indiana University Prevention)

  Opium (photo from erowid)

    1. Traders, Fighters, and Explorers: spread use of opium.
    2. Used opium as a trade product- sold seeds to Chinese (by 900 A.D. mentioned in Chinese Medical writing).
    3. Arabic physicians make substantial contributions to medicine and develop insights about opium: first description of addiction circa 1000 A.D.

Opium Wars

19th Century Use and Patterns

Opiates, Opioids, and Narcotics

Schaffer Library on Opiates (see especially the online chapters from "licit and Illicit Drugs)

Morphine(10% by weight of opium)
Codeine
Laudanum (10% opium and alcohol) (erowid image)
Paregoric (4% opium and alcohol) (wikipedia)

Heroin (diacetylmorphine)
Dilaudid (Hydromophone) (semi-synthetic) (erowid)
Oxycodone (Percodan) (semi-synthetic, from Thebaine) (wikipedia) (erowid)
Hydrocodone (Vicodin)
(erowid)

Buphrenorphine

Meperidine (Demerol)
Propoxyphene (Darvon)
Dolophine (Methadone) (wikipedia)
Pentazocine (Talwin)
Fentanyl (Sublimaze) (80x as potent as morphine) (wikipedia)(Fentanyl overdoses)

LD50-- 10-15x ED50

Harrison Narcotics Act of 1914

"The provision protecting physicians, however, contained a joker hidden in the phrase, "in the course of his professional practice only. "After passage of the law, this clause was interpreted by law-enforcement officers to mean that a doctor could not prescribe opiates to an addict to maintain his addiction. Since addiction was not a disease, the argument went, an addict was not a patient, and opiates dispensed to or prescribed for him by a physician were therefore not being supplied "in the course of his professional practice." Thus a law apparently intended to ensure the orderly marketing of narcotics was converted into a law prohibiting the supplying of narcotics to addicts, even on a physician's prescription." (The Consumers Union Report on Licit and Illicit Drugs by Edward M. Brecher and the Editors of Consumer Reports Magazine, 1972.   Chapter 8. The Harrison Narcotic Act (1914))

    1. The significance of the "career" and the group interaction.
    2. Addiction as a socio-cultural rather than a pharmacological reality
    3. Motivation for remaining in the subculture: It's a Meaningful life!
    4. Networks and satisfaction of accomplishment: Meeting the challenge- survival and economics.

Controlled Use of Narcotics

Norman Zinberg: Euphoria seekers (compulsive) and Maintainers

Goal is not getting a fix so much as it is succeeding in getting the money, and maintaining the "structure of the group."

"Chippying" or the "chipper"-- Controlled use patterns

All in study used heroin, IV, used for extended period of time, some with periods of compulsive use.

Controlled users different in that:

  1. Rarely used more than once a day
  2. Were able to keep a "stash"
  3. Avoided associating with "hard-core" addicts
  4. Used the drug recreationally rather than to treat depression
  5. Knew their dealer
  6. Did not use to "escape" reality
  7. Rituals and sanctions control use patterns.
    1. Define moderate use, condemn compulsive
    2. Limit use to physical, psychological, and social settings conducive to positive or 'safe' experiences
    3. Develop means of identifying untoward drug effects: test drugs to avoid OD
    4. Compartmentalize drug use and support non-drug related obligations and relationships.

"If, as I contend, the use of opiates and other illicit drugs is indeed an evolving social process, the recognition that the social setting strongly influences the capacity for control offers an alternative to prohibition. Elements of potential control are active in all groups of opiate users, even among addicts. Many opiate users representing many different styles of use have precepts, however punitive, that dictate how they can use their drug without becoming addicted or suffering physical and psychological damage, or, at least, how they can use the drug in order to get what they desire from it. Is it not possible that using groups will gradually develop these ideas into social sanctions and rituals similar to those that govern acceptable alcohol use (Zinberg et al. 1975)? Although the sample studied in my NIDA project is small, the fact that many of those who fulfilled the project's stringent criteria for controlled use had formerly been addicted suggests the need to consider approaches other than abstinence. For example, assisting the maintenance of controlled use could be a practical means of preventing drug abuse with the least social cost; and experimenting with this alternative in a careful and gradual way would not obstruct the effort to discourage the use of the opiates generally." (Norman E. Zinberg, "Nonaddictive Opiate Use in Robert 1. DuPont, Avram Goldstein, and John O'Donnel (eds.), Handbook on Drug Abuse (Rockville, MD: National Institute on Drug Abuse, 1979), pp. 303-313.)

Drug Effects and the Heroin Scene

Yet, in other contexts: not so problematic

Why Use Heroin?

Kicking the Habit

Myths, Reality and the Future

    1. Quantity and quality increasing: 14-80% pure depending on type (Columbian/Mexican) and location (DEA Pluse Check: Mid Year 2000)
    2. Current MTF Data
    3. Current NSDUH Data: 2013 1.8% report lifetime use, .3% report past year use, and .1% report past month use (US population 12 and older). Rates for OxyContin use are about twice that for heroin.
    4. Due to social image: unlikely to become as popular as cocaine.
    5. But, new forms of use: "Chasing the Dragon" and a new smokable "speedball"--heroin and crack.
    6. Alternating between heroin and crack or cocaine, some areas: MDMA and Ketamine are popular. (DEA Pluse Check: Mid Year 2000)
    7. Combination with methamphetamine/ice.
    8. Alcohol use remains popular

Psychotherapeutic Drugs

URL: http://www.umsl.edu/~keelr/180/narcotic.html
Owner: Robert O. Keel rok@umsl.edu
References and Credits for this Page of Notes
Last Updated: Thursday, November 2, 2017 11:42 AM