Saturday, 30 June 2018

CAN DRUG (HARD DRUGS) CONSUMPTION BE RIGHTLY CLASSIFIED AS THE RESULTANT EFFECT OF CIVILIZATION, INDUSTRIALIZATION AND MODERNITY ON THE SOCIETY?

CAN DRUG (HARD DRUGS) CONSUMPTION BE RIGHTLY CLASSIFIED AS THE RESULTANT EFFECT OF CIVILIZATION, INDUSTRIALIZATION AND MODERNITY ON THE SOCIETY?

Some people in our world today believe, and many more are made to believe that consumption and use of hard drugs by the youths of our generation is the resultant effect of civilization, industrialization and modernity. Some steps will be taken in this discourse with the intention of bringing the people of our generation to the truth.

STEP 1           HISTORY AND ORIGIN OF THE EXISTENCE OF HARD DRUGS:
Drug use and abuse is as old as mankind itself. Human beings have always had a desire to eat or drink substances that make them feel relaxed, stimulated, or euphoric. The start of farming about 6000 B.C. and the later discovery of fermentation were closely followed by the production of alcohol.
Humans have used drugs of one sort or another for thousands of years. Wine was used at least from the time of the early Egyptians; narcotics from 4000 B.C.; and medicinal use of marijuana has been dated to 2737 B.C. in China.
A common belief is that psychotropic plant chemicals evolved recurrently throughout evolutionary history. Roughly 13,000 years ago, the inhabitants of Timor commonly used betel nut (Areca catechu), as did those in Thailand around 10,700 years ago.
At the beginning of European colonialism, and perhaps for 40,000 years before that, Australian aborigines used nicotine from two different indigenous sources: pituri plant (Duboisia hopwoodii) and Nicotiana gossel.
But not until the 19th cent. A.D. were the active substances in drugs extracted. There followed a time when some of these newly discovered substances—morphine, laudanum, cocaine—were completely unregulated and prescribed freely by physicians for a wide variety of ailments. They were available in patent medicines and sold by traveling tinkers, in drugstores, or through the mail.
During the American Civil War, morphine was used freely, and wounded veterans returned home with their kits of morphine and hypodermic needles. Opium dens flourished. By the early 1900s there were an estimated 250,000 addicts in the United States.
The problems of addiction were recognized gradually. Legal measures against drug abuse in the United States were first established in 1875, when opium dens were outlawed in San Francisco. The first national drug law was the Pure Food and Drug Act of 1906, which required accurate labeling of patent medicines containing opium and certain other drugs.
In 1914 the Harrison Narcotic Act forbade sale of substantial doses of opiates or cocaine except by licensed doctors and pharmacies. Later, heroin was totally banned.
Subsequent Supreme Court decisions made it illegal for doctors to prescribe any narcotic to addicts; many doctors who prescribed maintenance doses as part of an addiction treatment plan were jailed, and soon all attempts at treatment were abandoned.
Use of narcotics and cocaine diminished by the 1920s. The spirit of temperance led to the prohibition of alcohol by the Eighteenth Amendment to the Constitution in 1919, but Prohibition was repealed in 1933.
In the 1930s most states required antidrug education in the schools, but fears that knowledge would lead to experimentation caused it to be abandoned in most places.
Soon after the repeal of Prohibition, the U.S. Federal Bureau of Narcotics (now the Drug Enforcement Administration) began a campaign to portray marijuana as a powerful, addicting substance that would lead users into narcotics addiction. In the 1950s, use of marijuana increased again, along with that of amphetamines and tranquilizers.
The social upheaval of the 1960s brought with it a dramatic increase in drug use and some increased social acceptance; by the early 1970s some states and localities had decriminalized marijuana and lowered drinking ages.
The 1980s brought a decline in the use of most drugs, but cocaine and crack use soared. The military became involved in border patrols for the first time, and troops invaded Panama and brought its de facto leader, Manuel Noriega, to trial for drug trafficking.
Throughout the years, the public's perception of the dangers of specific substances changed. The surgeon general's warning label on tobacco packaging gradually made people aware of the addictive nature of nicotine.
By 1995, the Food and Drug Administration was considering its regulation. The recognition of fetal alcohol syndrome brought warning labels to alcohol products. The addictive nature of prescription drugs such as diazepam (Valium) became known, and caffeine came under scrutiny as well.
Drug laws have tried to keep up with the changing perceptions and real dangers of substance abuse. By 1970 over 55 federal drug laws and countless state laws specified a variety of punitive measures, including life imprisonment and even the death penalty.
To clarify the situation, the Comprehensive Drug Abuse Prevention and Control Act of 1970 repealed, replaced, or updated all previous federal laws concerned with narcotics and all other dangerous drugs.
While possession was made illegal, the severest penalties were reserved for illicit distribution and manufacture of drugs. The act dealt with prevention and treatment of drug abuse as well as control of drug traffic.
The Anti-Drug Abuse Acts of 1986 and 1988 increased funding for treatment and rehabilitation; the 1988 act created the Office of National Drug Control Policy. Its director, often referred to as the drug “czar,” is responsible for coordinating national drug control policy.
STEP 2           ORIGIN OF THE USE OF HARD DRUGS:

As time went by, "home remedies" were discovered and used to alleviate:

i.                   aches,
ii.                 pains and
iii.              other ailments.
Most of these preparations were herbs, roots, mushrooms or fungi. They had to be eaten, drunk, rubbed on the skin, or inhaled to achieve the desired effect.
These were all naturally occurring substances. No refinement had occurred, and isolation of specific compounds (drugs) had not taken place.

Religious rites

Certain of these preparations were discovered to produce euphoria, exaltation, and trance-like states. Many of these were used in religious rites. Drugs also were used:
·         To see visions or gain insights
·         To dull the pain of ritual mutilation in initiation ceremonies
·         To enhance the strength and pain resistance of warriors to prepare them for battle, or to program them to kill
·         As pain or hunger suppressants
·         To help cope with thin air at high altitudes
·         To relax during celebrations
By current standards, the historical use of herbal preparations was not too harmful. It became so only after mankind learned to increase the potency and effects of these substances.
STEP 3           CLASSIFICATION OF HARD DRUGS:

i.                    Cocaine.
ii.                  Marijuana.
iii.                Nicotine.
iv.               Opiates.
v.                 Steroids
vi.               Ecstasy.
vii.             Mushrooms etc.

STEP 4           IS HARD DRUG CONSUMPTION AND USE A RESULTANT EFFECT OF CIVILIZATION?

                        From all indications drug use is as old as humanity which predates civilization. It will therefore be an overstatement to ascribe the consumption of drug to civilization.

It may however, be argued that civilization has led to the increase in its consumption, for many who would have known nothing about hard drugs have been exposed to such drugs either by industrialization, trafficking, sales and promotion.

STEP 5           WHY DO PEOPLE USE OR CONSUME HARD DRUGS?
                   People take drugs for many reasons:
i.                  peer pressure,
ii.           relief of stress,
iii.         increased energy,
iv.        to relax,
v.           to relieve pain,
vi.        to escape reality,
vii.      to feel more self-esteem,
viii.   for recreation.
They may take stimulants to keep alert, or cocaine for the feeling of excitement it produces. Athletes and bodybuilders may take anabolic steroids to increase muscle mass.
STEP 6           WHAT DOES THE CONSUMPTION OF HARD DRUGS DO FOR THE USERS AND IN THEIR LIVES?
The effects of drug use and abuse can be felt on many levels:
i.                          on the individual,
ii.                 on friends and family,
iii.              on society.

On the Individual

People who use drugs experience a wide array of physical effects other than those expected. The excitement of cocaine high, for instance, is followed by a “crash”:
i.                   a period of anxiety,
ii.                 fatigue, depression,
iii.              an acute desire for more cocaine to alleviate the feelings of the crash.
Marijuana and alcohol interfere with motor control and are factors in many automobile accidents. Users of marijuana and hallucinogenic drugs may experience flashbacks, unwanted recurrences of the drug's effects weeks or months after use. Sudden abstinence from certain drugs results in withdrawal symptoms.
For example, heroin withdrawal can cause:
i.                          vomiting,
ii.                 muscle cramps,
iii.              convulsions,
iv.              delirium.
With the continued use of a physically addictive drug, tolerance develops; i.e., constantly increasing amounts of the drug are needed to duplicate the initial effect.
Sharing hypodermic needles used to inject some drugs dramatically increases the risk of contracting AIDS and some types of hepatitis.
In addition, increased sexual activity among drug users, both in prostitution and from the disinhibiting effect of some drugs, also puts them at a higher risk of AIDS and other sexually transmitted diseases.
Because the purity and dosage of illegal drugs are uncontrolled, drug overdose is a constant risk. There are over 10,000 deaths directly attributable to drug use in the United States every year; the substances most frequently involved are:
i.                   cocaine,
ii.                 heroin,
iii.              morphine, often combined with alcohol or other drugs.
Many drug users engage in criminal activity, such as burglary and prostitution, to raise the money to buy drugs, and some drugs, especially alcohol, are associated with violent behavior.

Effects on the Family

The user's preoccupation with the substance, plus its effects on mood and performance, can lead to marital problems and poor work performance or dismissal.
Drug use can disrupt family life and create destructive patterns of codependency, that is, the spouse or whole family, out of love or fear of consequences, inadvertently enables the user to continue using drugs by covering up, supplying money, or denying there is a problem.
Pregnant drug users, because of the drugs themselves or poor self-care in general, bear a much higher rate of low birth-weight babies than the average.
Many drugs (e.g., crack and heroin) cross the placental barrier, resulting in addicted babies who go through withdrawal soon after birth, and fetal alcohol syndrome can affect children of mothers who consume alcohol during pregnancy.
Pregnant women who acquire the AIDS virus through intravenous drug use pass the virus to their infant.

Effects on Society

Drug abuse affects society in many ways. In the workplace it is costly in terms of lost work time and inefficiency. Drug users are more likely than nonusers to have occupational accidents, endangering themselves and those around them.
Over half of the highway deaths in the United States involve alcohol. Drug-related crime can disrupt neighborhoods due to violence among:
i.                          drug dealers,
ii.                 threats to residents,
iii.              the crimes of the addicts themselves.
In some neighborhoods, younger children are recruited as lookouts and helpers because of the lighter sentences given to juvenile offenders, and guns have become commonplace among children and adolescents.
The great majority of homeless people have either a drug or alcohol problem or a mental illness—many have all three.
The federal government of U.S budgeted $17.9 billion on drug control in 1999 for:
i.                          interdiction,
ii.                 prosecution,
iii.              international law enforcement,
iv.              prisons, treatment,
v.                 prevention,
vi.              related items.
In 1998, drug-related health care costs in the United States came to more than $9.9 billion.
STEP 7           ADDICTION DEFINED:
Addiction is more often now defined by the continuing, compulsive nature of the drug use despite physical and/or psychological harm to the user and society and includes both licit and illicit drugs, and the term “substance abuse” is now frequently used because of the broad range of substances (including alcohol and inhalants) that can fit the addictive profile.
Psychological dependence is the subjective feeling that the user needs the drug to maintain a feeling of well-being; physical dependence is characterized by tolerance (the need for increasingly larger doses in order to achieve the initial effect) and withdrawal symptoms when the user is abstinent.
Drug addiction is thought of as an adjunctive behavior, or a subordinate behavior catalyzed by deeper, more significant psychological and biological stimuli.
It is not just a pharmacological reaction to a chemical but a mode of compensation for a decrease in Darwinian fitness. There are three main components involved in substance addiction:
i.                   developmental attachment,
ii.                 pharmacological mechanism, and
iii.              social phylogeny including social inequality, dominance, and social dependence.
Drugs and chemical addiction is a near impossible incurable mental disease.
STEP 8           REHABILITATION AND RECOVERY OF DRUG ADDICTS:
Treatment of substance abusers depends upon the severity and nature of the addiction, motivation, and the availability of services. Some users may come into treatment voluntarily and have the support of family, friends, and workplace.
Others may be sent to treatment by the courts against their will and have virtually no support system. Most people in drug treatment have a history of criminal behavior; approximately one third are sent by the criminal justice system.
Both pharmacological and behavioral treatments are used, often augmented by educational and vocational services. Treatment may include:
i.                          detoxification,
ii.                 therapy,
iii.              support groups, such as the 12-step groups Alcoholics Anonymous, Narcotics Anonymous, and Cocaine Anonymous.
Many people have a notion and believe that drug use (consumption of hard drugs) is the bad habit cultivated, developed and imbibed by people. In other words, addiction especially drug or chemical addiction comes into someone’s life because of the bad habits developed, or imbibed by the person in abusing drugs.

As true as the above statement is, as soon as the drugs alter the behavioural pattern of the user, by altering the chemical substance in the brain, leading to a change in chemical metabolism of the body, addiction sets in which proves to be beyond the control of the victim – resulting into an incurable mental disease.

NB:     Since we have come to the understanding of why people give themselves and lives over to hard drugs use and consumption, we owe our generation and world an obligation of offering services that will take the problems away from the general public before they seek their own ways or solutions to problems bulldozing them in life.

            We should therefore stop putting blames on civilization, industrialization and modernity, for drugs and its consumption had been with us right from the inception, and as old as the creation of the world.

Archbishop Prof. Mike D.D. JP., AP.
Consultant Addiction Counselor.
Tel: 08027724516; 08035092416; 08033072375.

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