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The Origins of Cocaine in America
The cocaine epidemic of the 1980s was not unprecedented. The
United States has previously dealt with the public health concern of
cocaine Addiction and its concomitant results: rising crime and
devastating impact upon social welfare. The following is a condensed
history of cocaine in the United States, leading up to the creation of
Crack Cocaine.
Natives of the Andes Mountains have used the plants containing
cocaine's active ingredient for medicinal and recreational purposes for
at least fifteen centuries. The Incas chewed the leaves from the
erythroxylon plant to stimulate their productivity and mood. The
practice of chewing Coca leaves continues today in South American
countries with indigenous coca plants.
Processed cocaine hydrochloride was first synthesized by Albert Niemann
of the University of Gottigen in Germany in 1859. Cocaine was
immediately heralded by European doctors as a wonder Drug that cured
fatigue, toothaches, headaches and a variety of other ailments. By the
late 1880s, cocaine was being hailed both in Europe and the United
States as an effective local anaesthetic and a treatment for Morphine
addiction. Dr. William Halstead, a noted United States physician who
later became Surgeon-in-Chief at Johns Hopkins Hospital, became one of
the first physicians to use cocaine as a local Anesthetic; he would
later struggle with an addiction to cocaine.
By the turn of the century, cocaine had become an ingredient in
everyday items in the United States, such as hay fever elixirs and
nerve tonics. Even Coca-Cola contained cocaine until 1903, when the
ingredient was replaced with Caffeine.(1) By some estimates, the
American public was consuming as much cocaine in 1906 as it would in
1976, and with only half the population. But in the wake of the
excitement generated by this new "wonder drug" came the scourge of
addiction. Tales of cocaine abuse began to proliferate as members of
the medical establishment and high society became cocaine addicts. In
1910 President William Taft declared that cocaine was a national threat.
Cocaine was first federally regulated in December 1914, with the
passage of the Harrison Act. The Harrison Act banned non-medical use of
cocaine; prohibited its importation; imposed the same criminal
penalties for cocaine users that were levied against users of opium,
morphine, and Heroin; and required a strict accounting of medical
prescriptions for cocaine. As a consequence of the Harrison Act -- and
the emergence in the 1930s of cheaper, legal, and readily available
drugs like Amphetamines -- cocaine became scarce in the United States.
By the 1950s it was no longer considered a problem worthy of law
enforcement attention.
Cocaine use began to rise again in the 1960s, prompting Congress, in
1970, to classify it as a Schedule II controlled substance, meaning it
was potentially susceptible to abuse and could produce dependency but
had legitimate medicinal uses.(2) However, it was still not considered
by many in the medical profession to be a serious health threat.(3)
Even as late as 1980, influential scientific writings reflected the
prevailing non-critical assessment of the dangers of cocaine: The 1980
edition of the Comprehensive Textbook of Psychiatry asserted that
cocaine posed no serious problem, if use was limited to two or three
times a week. Like the cocaine epidemic that occurred at the turn of
the century, cocaine once again was embraced by the social elite. The
deleterious effects of cocaine that were discovered merely 60 years
earlier appeared inexplicably to have been forgotten. However, by the
early 1980s, the nation's attitude toward cocaine had changed and
various law enforcement and public health efforts intended to control
its use were underway.
1. D. Musto, The American Disease, at 3.
2. The Controlled Substances Act of 1970.
3. Dr. Peter G. Bourne, a drug expert who would later become
President Carter's Special Assistant to the President on Health Issues,
wrote in 1974: "Cocaine ... is probably the most benign of illicit
drugs currently in widespread use .... Short acting -- about 15 minutes
-- not physically addicting, and acutely pleasurable, cocaine has found
increasing favor at all socioeconomic levels in the last year." Peter
G. Bourne, "The Great Cocaine Myth," Drugs and Drug abuse Education
Newsletter 5: 5 (1974). See also, F.H. Gawin and H.D. Kleber, "Evolving
Conceptualizations of Cocaine Dependence," Yale Journal of Biological
Medicine 61: 123-136 (1988).
Source: United States Department of Justice
Image Source: National Library of Medicine (NLM); Indiana State Police
| Definitions of Terms Used |
| Addiction | Strong physiological, emotional and/or psychological dependence on a substance such as alcohol or drugs that has progressed beyond voluntary control. For more on addiction see the section Addiction Information in this website.
| | Amphetamines | Stimulant drugs whose effects are very similar to cocaine.
| | Anesthetic | An agent that causes insensitivity to pain and is used for surgeries and other medical procedures.
| | Caffeine | Caffeine A mild stimulant,the most widely used drug in the world.
| | Coca | The plant, Erythroxylon, from which cocaine is derived. Also refers to the leaves of this plant.
| | Cocaine | A highly addictive stimulant drug derived from the cocoa plant that produces feelings of euphoria. Also see Crack.
| | Crack Cocaine | A chemically altered form of cocaine that is smoked.
| | Drug | Any substance, other than food, that changes the function or structure of the body or mind when ingested. Drugs essentially are poisons. The degree they are taken determines the effect. A small amount acts as a stimulant. A greater amount acts as a sedative. A larger amount acts as a poison and can kill one dead. This is true of any drug. Each has a different amount at which it gives those results.
| | Drug abuse | The use of illegal drugs or the inappropriate use of legal drugs. The repeated use of drugs to produce pleasure, to alleviate stress, or to alter or avoid reality - or all three.
| | Heroin | The potent, widely abused opiate that produces a profound addiction. It consists of two morphine molecules linked together chemically.
| | Morphine | Morphine The most potent natural opiate compound produced by the opium poppy.
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