Literature DB >> 29081434

Entitled to Addiction?: Pharmaceuticals, Race, and America's First Drug War.

David Herzberg.   

Abstract

This article rethinks the formative decades of American drug wars through a social history of addiction to pharmaceutical narcotics, sedatives, and stimulants in the first half of the twentieth century. It argues, first, that addiction to pharmaceutical drugs is no recent aberration; it has historically been more extensive than "street" or illicit drug use. Second, it argues that access to psychoactive pharmaceuticals was a problematic social entitlement constructed as distinctively medical amid the racialized reforms of the Progressive Era. The resulting drug control regime provided inadequate consumer protection for some (through the FDA), and overly punitive policing for others (through the FBN). Instead of seeing these as two separate stories-one a liberal triumph and the other a repressive scourge-both should be understood as part of the broader establishment of a consumer market for drugs segregated by class and race like other consumer markets developed in the era of Progressivism and Jim Crow.

Entities:  

Mesh:

Year:  2017        PMID: 29081434      PMCID: PMC5679069          DOI: 10.1353/bhm.2017.0061

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Bull Hist Med        ISSN: 0007-5140            Impact factor:   1.314


  13 in total

1.  [Review of: Healy, David. The Creation of psychopharmacology. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press, 2002].

Authors:  Nathan Greenslit
Journal:  Hist Psychiatry       Date:  2004-06

Review 2.  Debating the Controlled Substances Act.

Authors:  Joseph F Spillane
Journal:  Drug Alcohol Depend       Date:  2004-10-05       Impact factor: 4.492

Review 3.  The Controlled Substances Act: how a "big tent" reform became a punitive drug law.

Authors:  David T Courtwright
Journal:  Drug Alcohol Depend       Date:  2004-10-05       Impact factor: 4.492

4.  Preventing and Treating Narcotic Addiction--Century of Federal Drug Control.

Authors:  David T Courtwright
Journal:  N Engl J Med       Date:  2015-11-26       Impact factor: 91.245

5.  From King Kong pills to mother's little helpers--career cycles of two families of psychotropic drugs: the barbiturates and benzodiazepines.

Authors:  Toine Pieters; Stephen Snelders
Journal:  Can Bull Med Hist       Date:  2007

6.  The research basis for Robert Whitaker's "Anatomy of an epidemic: magic bullets, psychiatric drugs and the astonishing rise of mental illness in America.

Authors:  Marian W Roman
Journal:  Issues Ment Health Nurs       Date:  2012-10       Impact factor: 1.835

7.  America's first amphetamine epidemic 1929-1971: a quantitative and qualitative retrospective with implications for the present.

Authors:  Nicolas Rasmussen
Journal:  Am J Public Health       Date:  2008-04-29       Impact factor: 9.308

8.  From "happiness pills" to "national nightmare": changing cultural assessment of minor tranquilizers in America, 1955-1980.

Authors:  S L Speaker
Journal:  J Hist Med Allied Sci       Date:  1997-07       Impact factor: 2.088

9.  Increases in Drug and Opioid Overdose Deaths--United States, 2000-2014.

Authors:  Rose A Rudd; Noah Aleshire; Jon E Zibbell; R Matthew Gladden
Journal:  MMWR Morb Mortal Wkly Rep       Date:  2016-01-01       Impact factor: 17.586

10.  The history of barbiturates a century after their clinical introduction.

Authors:  Francisco López-Muñoz; Ronaldo Ucha-Udabe; Cecilio Alamo
Journal:  Neuropsychiatr Dis Treat       Date:  2005-12       Impact factor: 2.570

View more
  1 in total

1.  Societal Biases, Institutional Discrimination, and Trends in Opioid Use in the USA.

Authors:  Danielle R Fine; David Herzberg; Sarah E Wakeman
Journal:  J Gen Intern Med       Date:  2021-03       Impact factor: 5.128

  1 in total

北京卡尤迪生物科技股份有限公司 © 2022-2023.