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The History of Methamphetamine: An Epidemic In Context

The History of Methamphetamine: An Epidemic In Context. Patricia Case, Sc.D. Harvard Medical School. Acknowledgements. This research is partially supported by funding from the National Institute on Drug Abuse The views expressed in this paper are solely my own and do not reflect

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The History of Methamphetamine: An Epidemic In Context

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  1. The History of Methamphetamine:An Epidemic In Context Patricia Case, Sc.D. Harvard Medical School

  2. Acknowledgements This research is partially supported by funding from the National Institute on Drug Abuse The views expressed in this paper are solely my own and do not reflect the views of NIDA or the institutions by which the author is employed. I would like to express my gratitude to my tireless research assistants Ari Reiter and Sean Ferriter and to brainybetty.com for this PowerPoint template.

  3. The past is never dead. It's not even past. William Faulkner

  4. A Brief History1887 -1945 • 1887 Amphetamine first synthesized in Germany • 1919 Methamphetamine synthesized in Japan • 1927 Amphetamine used as a substitute for ephedrine • 1932 Benzedrine (amphetamine) in OTC nasal inhalers • 1935 Benzedrine tablets available by prescription • 1937 Benzedrine used to treat ~39 other conditions • 1937 Gorell recommends Benzedrine for fatigued doctors • 1938 First published report of amphetamine addiction • 1938 First description of amphetamine psychosis • 1940 Eggleston: “there is not much danger of …addiction” • 1940-45 Critical wartime period as all sides go to battle on amphetamines

  5. Medical Advance – Benzedrine1930’s Wonder Drug

  6. Wartime Benzedrine

  7. Wartime Field Supplies “About that time I discovered Benzedrine. Loved those little white suckers. We could get a sack full in those days. It sure didn't bother to get up at 3:00 AM anymore. Pop a couple of pills and you were wide awake ready to take on the whole world. If it kept you awake, just take a few sleeping pills. Boy! Isn't medical science great or what!!” from the memoirs of USAF Captain Bryant L. Smick on flying missions over Italy Everyone on the ship had taken two Benzedrine capsules when we reached bombing altitude – as if I needed anything to wake me up. From the memoirs of Herb Bach on a bombing run to Japan

  8. War Surplus and the Streets1944-1948

  9. Benzedrine Goes Bad 1950 -1959

  10. A Brief History – II1950 - 1970 1951 Prescriptions required by federal law for amp containing products 1958 ~3.5 billion tablets of legal amp tablets produced 1959 First injection of Benzedrine extracted from inhaler reported 1959 OTC Benzedrine inhalers withdrawn from the market • First OTC methamphetamine inhaler hits the market 1962 Early reports of illicit domestic production by biker gangs • Federal law requires prescriptions required for meth products 1965 OTC Methamphetamine inhalers withdrawn from the market • 31 million prescriptions written -- most to women 1970 ~10 billion tablets of legal amp/meth tablets produced

  11. Selling Speed 1950 -1965

  12. The Hidden Agenda - Housework

  13. Methamphetamine Goes Bad 1962-1969

  14. Outbreak Emergence1970 – 1975 (or so)

  15. Power and Writing 1942 Hitler begins methamphetamine injections – perhaps 1944 London newspaper claims “Methadrine wins the Battle of London” - maybe 1951 Jack Kerouac, under the influence, writes On TheRoad in 21 days on a single scroll of paper 1956 British Prime Minister Anthony Eden “lived on Benzedrine” during the Suez Crisis • JFK relies on injections of methamphetamine during the Cuban missile crisis 1970 William Burroughs publishes “Speed”

  16. Old Made New Again What Did We Know Then?

  17. Early Epidemiology • 1955: Newspaper estimates 3% of University of Md students using Benzedrine • 1966: Sadusk estimated that 800,000,000 methamphetamine pills made annually and 50% distributed illegally • 1970: Black surveyed 5,482 enlisted men, with 27% reporting drug use and of those, 37% reported lifetime use of amphetamines, 10% more than 100 times • 1971: Chambers estimates 35,000 New York household residents use “speed” regularly – 30 percent without prescription (compared to 6,000 regular users of cocaine)

  18. Association with Sexuality • 1937: “Stated that he was able to have sexual intercourse following the administration of the drug but that orgasm was almost instantaneous” • 1946: “A symptom which can regularly be observed in chronic alkaloid addicts is the homosexually toned perversion of their sex life”. • 1947: “The drug enabled him to indulge in auto-erotic activity four times in succession, making it indescribably delightful.” • 1952: [an addicted woman reported that] “an increase in sexual desire but a decrease in satisfaction” • 1953: [methamphetamine treated schizophrenic] “This is great. My penis feels much longer”.

  19. Lessons of History • Stimulant use is cyclic and endemic with outbreaks in the US.Stimulant cycles often followed by opiate/sedative/painkiller cycles. • The trajectory of an outbreak appears to be • 1) exploratory • 2) medicalization • 3) concern and regulation • 4) diffusion and criminalization • 5) severe social impact • 6) regression • New emergence and outbreaks with changes in technology, drug, economy or affected population group.

  20. What is different now?

  21. Methods of manufacture • Until mid-1990’s, the P2P method was used to produce D,L-methamphetamine -- a racemic mixture • P2P, a precursor, was regulated and subject to strict enforcement and arrest for possession - 1996 • Producers switched to the easier Birch (so-called Nazi) pseudoephedrine reduction method, producing very potent D-methamphetamine • The Birch reduction produces better “product” – diffusion brings more reliance on home production, less reliance on imported finished supplies. • Importation of precursors and theft of precursors now rampant.

  22. Key Differences • The Internet • Diffused local production, less reliance on imports • Multi-drug use – no one uses only crystal • National outbreak • Varied sub-populations • More smoking • Strong association with HIV, hepatitis C, STDs • Community level responses to AIDS deaths, 9/11, war • National discussion

  23. Meditations for the Conference • What is the role of social class, poverty, abuse and marginalization in the present-day methamphetamine outbreak? • Is it an outbreak or a continuation of an old pattern? • What strategies have and haven’t worked worked in the past to lessen the problems of methamphetamine use? • What are the “silences” – what population, what area, what pattern is not being discussed that needs to be? • How does the knowledge presented here relate to everything you know about what’s going on at home?

  24. Meditation on the Future • What will happen with ProVigil, approved in 1998 and now used extensively by the military in Iraq? Drug keeps pilots awake By Peter Mucha, Inquirer Staff Writer A much-ballyhooed anti-drowsiness drug made by West Chester-based Cephalon Inc. is taking off as the Air Force's new "go-pill.“ Provigil, also known by its generic name, modafinil, has been used more than 150 times this year by bomber crews to ward off sleepiness on missions of more than 12 hours. 2005 Projected Sales: $400 million

  25. “Faster, faster, until the thrill of speed overcomes the thrill of death” -Hunter S. Thompson

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