Literature DB >> 30676794

Curb Heroin In Plants (C.H.I.P.): Revisiting a Mid-1970s Intervention Into Workplace Heroin Addiction Created and Led by Detroit Autoworkers.

Jeremy Milloy1.   

Abstract

This article analyzes archival records to revisit Curb Heroin In Plants (C.H.I.P.), a public health intervention focusing on drug dependence that was created and led by Detroit, Michigan, autoworkers during the mid-1970s. Responding to widespread heroin use in Detroit auto plants, C.H.I.P. combined methadone maintenance with counseling on and off the job to treat heroin dependence while supporting autoworkers in continuing in employment and family life. Although C.H.I.P. ultimately failed, it was a promising attempt to transcend medical/punitive approaches and treat those with substance use disorder in a nonstigmatizing way, with attention to the workplace dimensions of their disorder and recovery. I argue that revisiting C.H.I.P. speaks to current public health debates about the intersection between the workplace and harmful drug use and how to create effective interventions and policies that are mindful of this intersection. For historians, C.H.I.P. is a valuable example of the crucial role of workplace actors in the early war on drugs and of an early methadone program that was not strongly concerned with crime reduction but incorporated social externalities (specifically job performance) to measure success.

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Year:  2019        PMID: 30676794      PMCID: PMC6366495          DOI: 10.2105/AJPH.2018.304858

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Am J Public Health        ISSN: 0090-0036            Impact factor:   9.308


  4 in total

1.  Pathways linking drug use and labour market trajectories: the role of catastrophic events.

Authors:  Lindsey Richardson; Will Small; Thomas Kerr
Journal:  Sociol Health Illn       Date:  2015-09-11

2.  "I Always Kept a Job": Income Generation, Heroin Use and Economic Uncertainty in 21st Century Detroit.

Authors:  Paul J Draus; Juliette Roddy; Mark Greenwald
Journal:  J Drug Issues       Date:  2010-10-01

3.  Societal costs of prescription opioid abuse, dependence, and misuse in the United States.

Authors:  Howard G Birnbaum; Alan G White; Matt Schiller; Tracy Waldman; Jody M Cleveland; Carl L Roland
Journal:  Pain Med       Date:  2011-03-10       Impact factor: 3.750

4.  Recurring Epidemics of Pharmaceutical Drug Abuse in America: Time for an All-Drug Strategy.

Authors:  David Herzberg; Honoria Guarino; Pedro Mateu-Gelabert; Alex S Bennett
Journal:  Am J Public Health       Date:  2016-01-21       Impact factor: 9.308

  4 in total

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