preview

Drug Usage In America Essay

Decent Essays

Drug Usage in America
America has a problem with drugs. In order to understand the problem, we first need to understand what is considered a drug. It is “any ingestible substance that has a noticeable effect on the mind or body”. (Schmalleger, 2011) Drugs are used for medicinal as well as recreational purposes. Unfortunately both types of drugs have played a role in American culture.
History of Drug Use
Drugs have been part of the American culture as far back as the 1800’s. Using drugs for medicinal purposes existed before the 1800’s but it was during the years 1850 to 1914 when America suffered from what was considered the first epidemic of drug use.
Opium
During the 1800’s one of the medicinal uses of opiates was targeted toward …show more content…

Throughout the early 1900’s unregulated medicinal "tonics" were sold containing ingredients including cocaine and opium. By 1902 there were an estimated 200,000 cocaine addicts in the United States, and by 1907, U.S. coca leaf imports were three times their 1900 levels.” (The Buyers - A Social History Of America's Most Popular Drugs | Drug Wars | FRONTLINE | PBS, n.d.)
Harrison Narcotics Tax Act
In 1914, the Congress of the United States passed Harrison Narcotics Tax Act. The Act would “provide for the registration of, with collectors of internal revenue, and to impose a special tax on all persons who produce, import, manufacture, compound, deal in, dispense, sell, distribute, or give away opium or coca leaves, their salts, derivatives, or preparations, and for other purposes” (Harrison Narcotics Tax Act, 1914 - Full Text, n.d.). The Act contained the phrase “in the course of his professional practice only” which ultimately turned this law into a prohibition instead of taxation when law-enforcement interpreted the phrase to mean physicians would only be permitted to prescribe opiates for normal practices but would not be able to treat addictions. Many physicians and addicts were quickly arrested and some were imprisoned. Those who were not sent to prison ended up losing their practices as a result of the negative publicity (Brecher, E.M. & Editors of Consumer Reports Magazine, n.d.).
A negative impact of the Harrison Act was the lack of available opiates for those

Get Access