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Heroin Addiction : A New Problem

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Heroin addiction is not a new problem. Heroin is an opiate and opiates have been around since as early as 3400 B.C., when poppies were cultivated in lower Mesopotamia for the euphoric effects they provided. In 1803 opium was turned into morphine and by 1874 was synthesized into heroin. In 1895 production of heroin began, and because heroin addiction became such a large-scale problem in the United States by 1903, opium was banned in 1905. In 1952 there were 200,000 addicts and by 1965-1970 the number had grown to roughly 750,000 (Frontline | PBS, 1998).
And, according to a report by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC, 2015, p. 1), the demographics of heroin users are changing. The distribution of heroin use is moving out of the cities into rural and suburban areas. The highest increase in first time use is seen in white non-Hispanic males, but the rate of women using is going up also. Heroin addiction used to be primarily considered as being a problem of men, but now women are catching up (Millman, 2014, p. 1). Not only is use among women increasing but it is also on the rise in those with private insurance and higher incomes (Harris, 2015, p.3). The CDC says that part of the problem is from doctors over prescribing opioid pain relievers to patients. Rather than addressing the cause of patient problems, many doctors have found it easier to simply prescribe a pill. This has helped to move heroin use into previously unaffected demographics (Leonard, 2015, p.

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