18
Changes of Scene
If
Dr Anstie or Sir Arthur Pease, De Quincey or some nameless back-street
seller of laudanum, or some others of the great range of relevant
nineteenth-century actors were today to return to earth and inspect the
current production of the play in which they had once performed, how
strange , or familiar to their expectations would they find the present
scene? For a start, they would certainly be chagrined to discover how
little most people even in specialist circles read or remembered the
writings, the debates and the campaigns, or the back-street shops. Only
De Quincey could expect a familiar greeting. Here and there some of
them would uncover pleasing little reminders that they had indeed once
trodden the same ground - the Society for the Study of Addiction still
exists as monument, and the British Journal of Addiction, which under
an earlier name reported their scientific deliberations, moves forward
towards its hundredth year of publication. The phrase `Chinese Heroin'
would catch attention, and a previously distrusting view of the
Oriental would be reinforced by the news that the Triad gangs had moved
into the heroin import and distribution business - a small but poetic
vengeance for the opium wars. The growing of British opium is
forgotten, although the keen home cultivator may produce his few plants
of cannabis at risk of prosecution, while the market stalls in the
Fenlands are innocent of any memory of opium pills. The question of
`infant doping' in the meaning familiar to the nineteenth-century
reformers might not appear to be completely dead when they discovered
the vast prescribing in America (and to a lesser extent in Britain) of
amphetamines to the `overactive child'. They would, of course, be
fascinated by the progress of science, and particularly by the
astonishing recent discovery that the body produces its own opiate-like
substances.
But beyond the little assurances of sameness and the
many little evidences of change, there would soon dawn on these
visitors the large and central fact that a concern with drugs and with
addiction was still enormously with us. The market stalls or the
chandler may no longer be selling opium, but tranquillizers are
multinational business. Concern over how we are to co-exist with drugs,
far from having faded away, has become a continuing and major source of
societal anxiety. The definition of drug taking as a problem - the
whole `problem framework' which began hesitantly to emerge in the
nineteenth century - remains now as a dominant and usually unquestioned
legacy.
So far as the prevalence of addiction is concerned, what
would most surprise the nineteenth-century actors would be that a
matter which had seemed for decades to be under control in this country
- a success story for their reforming endeavours and the control system
whose foundations they laid - had broken through again in the 1 960s.
Behind the actual upsurge in numbers would, on closer inspection, be
seen the emergence of a prevalent type of ._ addict which the
nineteenth century had not envisaged. The drug problem has become
dominantly a problem of young people: roughly twice as many men as
women are now affected, and prevalence has in recent years shown an
even social class spread. Heroin and cocaine were the drugs of choice
at the start of the new epidemic, although a wide variety of other
substances were soon in use too. Multiple drug use is now the order of
the day: drugs are being injected intravenously. The source of supply
for heroin and cocaine may initially have been the over-prescribing of
a handful of doctors, but soon a situation arose where drugs were
obtained from many sources - lax prescription, pharmacy breaking,
thefts from warehouses, illicit manufacture of amphetamines and so on -
and then circulated through a system of large or petty blackmarket
dealings. Drug users were drawn together for supply and mutual support:
they began to use the same jargon, to assume a sub-cultural identity.
The ugly and denigrating American word `junkie' began to be heard. Drug
use and crime inevitably became associated because illegal possession
of drugs, and their `supply', were crimes by definition; because
pharmacy breaking and forged prescriptions became common; and because
the prior petty criminal involvement of many of the adolescents drawn
into this drug world came to be mixed with their drug taking. In
America the young `street addict' came to be seen as at the very centre
of the problem of law and order, and as he stole and robbed to support
his habit, he re-cycled the wealth of New York or Chicago. Some
intimations of the potential for drug-taking to stimulate the formation
of sub-cultures had been seen in the nineteenth century. But
cannabis-taking among British artistic circles of that period had, for
instance, never even faintly become a centrally cohesive activity in
the way that the seeking and use of heroin became an organizing
activity for groups of young city dwellers in the twentieth century.
Looking
at our contemporary drug scene, the nineteenth-century visitor might
therefore at first conclude that, although drug misuse was still with
us, the nature of the phenomenon was so different in social terms that
we were not now talking about the same happening. The stereotype of the
middle-class woman injecting the morphia which her doctor has unwisely
given her is replaced by the image of the addict as the drop-out, the
delinquent adolescent, the fringe member of society. However, on close
inspection, the junkie himself might be seen as the fullest incarnation
of nineteenth-century fears of the `stimulant' use of opium - here
indeed is the stereotype of addiction for fun and indulgence, for what
the nineteenth century feared in the rumoured uses of opium in the mill
towns. There is a parallel between our fear of the pleasure-seeking
rebellion of youth and the previous century's terror of the working
classes getting out of hand.
Important strands in the total
nineteenth-century story of opium use of course included, besides
addiction, the fundamental themes of opium as self-medication and opium
in medical practice, that is, the place of the drug in therapeutics. In
looking at the ways in which nineteenth-century themes carry through to
the present, it is important therefore to stress that the totality of
the story is not encompassed simply by addiction and drug problems.
What current manifestations of therapeutics are the heirs of opium as
medicine?
Under that heading, it would soon be evident to the
inquiring visitor that Britain still has a vast and rich tradition of
self-medication, which is not today a matter of opium but of many other
substances. And even as medical prescribing and folk traditions of
self-medication merged in the nineteenth century and the use of opium
for symptomatic treatment of illness shaded off with no clear
demarcation into drug-taking for pleasure, or relief of anomie, so
today there are similar mergings affecting the drugs which are employed
in place of opium. As regards present rates of self-prescribing, Karen
Dunnell and Ann Cartwright1 found in a community survey that over a
two-week period the ratio among adults of self-prescribed to prescribed
medicines was roughly two to one. Two-thirds of adults had in fact
taken a selfprescribed medicine over the previous two-week period,
while about 41 per cent of the sample had taken `aspirin or other pain
killers' during that time. Nineteen per cent of babies had been given
`an indigestion remedy or gripe water'. All the reasons which formerly
made opium so popular for symptomatic medication are still society's
common pains and tribulations, but with a variety of drugs now taking a
role in different areas - analgesics in particular in place of opium
for pain relief or ill-defined malaise, varieties of cough medicine
where opium was previously the sovereign remedy, and tranquillizers and
anti-depressants as present-day substitutes on a huge scale for opium's
role as a psycho-active drug for the relief of nervous tribulations and
the stress of life. In 1968 a piece of research showed that diazepam
(Valium), a minor tranquillizer, is now the most frequently prescribed
of any single drug in Britain .2 One may well suspect that diazepam is
taken as much for relief of anomie as for any diagnosable medical
condition, and for the young mother living in the tower block its role
is closely similar to that of opium in the nineteenth-century slums.
Other work has shown that 8.6 per cent of adults in the U.K. will,
during a twelve-month period, have taken anxiety-relieving drugs
continuously for four weeks at a stretch. The multiple heirs to opium
are self-prescribed, sometimes on the doctor's advice, obtained on
medical prescription, swapped around the family, or given as a free
sample by a drug firm and generously passed on by the doctor to his
patient.
What might then cause surprise to ghostly visitors would be
the discovery that in our contemporary and drug-laden society the most
vocal manifestation of reforming public concern over drugs has been
directed not at bringing substances under stricter control, but at the
legalization of cannabis. A remarkable reversal in the attachments of
liberal sentiment in one sense has come about. In the nineteenth
century, men and women of good conscience and middle-class
self-assurance were worrying about the opium use of the working classes
and the quietening syrups which the mother in the industrial town gave
to her baby: the contemporary middleclass reform movement has argued
that cannabis use should be left to personal choice and claims that
drug laws are applied with discrimination against working-class black
youths in Brixton. Without discussing the factual basis for concern,
there is some reminder here of the arbitrariness of what counts as a
liberal cause, although it could be argued that closer analysis might
show less of a paradox than surface inspection suggests. Today's reform
movements have a philosophy which borrows much from nineteenth-century
liberalism and J. S. Mill's emphasis on the individual's right of
choice. The surface causes may suggest a turnabout, but the philosophy
is continuous.
Evidence of the seriousness with which drug misuse is
viewed today and the status which the problem has achieved might then
be picked up in terms of the scope of government responses, the
institutes and the international meetings and proliferation of learned
journals, the committees and reports, the ramifications of the United
Nations' control apparatus and the international treaties, the flow of
Western money towards eradication, of opiumgrowing or crop-substitution
programmes in the East. 3, ° The listing (and the costing) of this
range of happenings, and comparison with nineteenth-century
equivalents, could be seen as the real measure of the growth and
institutionalization of social action. Nineteenth-century concern with
the opium trade between India and China was basically an unofficial and
uninstitutionalized response made by moral reformers, who sought the
leverage to move governments and forced their anxieties on to
parliament; their activities are now the formal business of the United
Nations. It is an analysis of the pounds and dollars spent, the offices
given over to these activities, the number of policemen, bureaucrats
and customs officers directed to such ends, which gives the true
picture of change. Governments now operate where previously only the
amateurish societies for Improvement were at work. The small but
generous benefactions of good Quaker bankers are replaced by the
multi-million dollar U.N. Special Fund on Drug Abuse Control
(U.N.F.D.A.C.).
Opiates still have particular symbolic meaning for
national activity and for international crusade, but the concerns and
activities of control now spread much more widely, and there were
already hints of this in the nineteenth century, with cocaine, cannabis
and chloral entering the arena. The U.N. Single Convention of 1961
dealt essentially with opiates, cocaine and cannabis, but the
Convention on Psychotropic Substances of 1971 aims to spread the net
far more widely, and at the international level reflects the anxieties
which many countries are experiencing over the misuse of synthetic
stimulants such as the amphetamines, and depressants such as the
barbiturates and other sedatives, and the minor tranquillizers. Many of
the nineteenth-century activists were concerned with the problems of
alcohol as well as opiates, but the extent to which the two movements
have come together has been limited, despite the promulgation by the
World Health Organization of the `Combined Approach'. And cigarette
smoking, although an aspect of the addiction problem which is
increasingly acknowledged as constituting in most countries a far
greater threat to health than the traditional substances of concern,
tends to be dealt with through social mechanisms separate from either
drugs or alcohol. There can be no doubt that the historian of the
future will find fascinating material in our present fumbling toward
policies to deal with smoking, our ability so sanguinely to accept
smoking as a drug habit which in this country perhaps kills 100,000
people each year, and the contrast with the massive concern over
opiates, which evidently do so much less harm.
To look at the
present in terms of how it might be perceived by any of the key figures
from the nineteenth century's opium debates is not just a device for
stringing together a series of images. Unless one is reading history
for history's sake, the account of the previous century's engagement
with drugs given in earlier chapters inevitably invites introspective
and self-regarding concern as to the continuities and the contrasts
which can be detected, and the insights which may be gained into our
own predicament. We look at the past not simply for the fun of it, but
with the hope that we may better understand the present.
Superficial
attempts to read `lessons from history' can only mislead. Britain is
dealing now with many of the same drugs as a century ago, but the
society within which drugs are used and controlled, and related
problems defined, has radically changed.
The analytical approach
which guides this chapter rests on the belief that the very facts of
changing social context which make nonsense of the attempt to write
history as homily are also exactly the difficulties which, if met
rather than ignored, render this process of extrapolation meaningful.
By taking due note of the changing nature of context one can then see
more clearly the continuing themes, with their true underlying
continuity in no way diminished by the fact that their expression will
be very much shaped and altered by the context of changing times. For
instance, one theme which can be traced is that of society's image of
the heavy drug user: `bad habit' is replaced by `addiction', and in
different contexts the word addiction itself has then certainly changed
in meaning and implication. The complex theme of social control is also
very important, and given that concept as an organizing idea, it is
possible to relate the many different strategies of informal and formal
control which society has employed over the decades.
The ways in
which society thinks about and handles drugs could indeed be read as a
set of markers which when properly comprehended offer important ways
into understanding the nature and processes of the particular society
which thinks and handles.
For the professional historian, the
question of how and to what extent history is to be taken as addressing
the present is a familiar debate. Parallel arguments also concern the
anthropologist, who must be immensely aware of the dangers of the type
of over-simple reading of anthropological material which seeks in
Westernoriented ways to slant and demean the interpretation of
primitive cultures toward instructive fables and pretty analogies for
our own times.
This introductory section to the present chapter has
attempted to set out in brief form some of the wide range of issues on
which comparison could be made between past and present - a catchup
note for the nineteenth-century visitor, or in reality a checklist for
ourselves. The potential themes are many and others could certainly be
identified beyond those which will be touched on here.
Having thus set the scene, we shall select a few of the themes and attempt to go rather deeper.
Medicalization as organizing idea
The
account given in this book of a progressive medical dominance in
society's ways of thinking about and responding to drugs identifies a
theme which runs through to the present day and to modern sociological
debate. The nineteenth century was a period during which the basis was
laid for a disease theory of addiction. The social consequences were
seen in the addict being defined as patient, the design of treatment
methods and treatment facilities _which would now deal with this
illness, and the emergence of medical specialists who had the
continuing right to define the realities. The medical profession
certainly at times became an instrument of control as well as of
treatment. Opiates were literally taken away from the people and became
in large measure the property of the doctors. Both practically and
conceptually (and in the broadest sense politically), drugs became
medicalized. Later. in this chapter, aspects of medicalization will be
taken up under a number of headings. The influences of medical thinking
in this field have gradually become so protean that it is indeed
difficult to find a theme which is not in some way related to this
idea. While leaving detailed consideration of medical influence within
particular themes till later, it is useful here to look briefly at some
general questions relating to medicalization.
Conspiracy theory is a
simple-minded approach which seemingly offers instant answers to all
these questions. The basic thesis was many years ago economically
stated by Bernard Shaw - `Every profession is a conspiracy against the
laity'. It is this idea which finds its elaboration in the writings of
Szasz5 or Laing,6 or in the polemics of Illich.7 It is also an idea
which at times influences formal sociological studies of
professionalism, studies which despite their claimed objectivity reveal
a paranoid tinge. Medicine is portrayed as out to grab as many monopoly
rights as possible, and arbitrarily but with value-laden judgements. to
delineate which deviations from accepted behaviour are to be called
sick. Witch-hunting and case-finding are deemed then to be synonymous
activities. The profession claims the right to control the stigmatized
individual in the name of treatment, and supports or engages in
widespread repressive social action in the name of public health. The
essential device which is supposed to legitimize this whole packet of
medical interference is the doctor's claim that the behaviour in
question is illness or disease. With drug-taking behaviour, this
analysis therefore suggests that the essential piece of legerdemain was
the medical promulgation of addiction as a disease - the discovery of a
circumscribed and diagnosable medical condition where previously there
had only been `bad habit'.
To what extent though is the medical
profession ever usefully to be seen as an autonomous social
organization, an entity moved entirely by its own intent and volition?'
This is certainly not the argument of the historical chapters of this
book; but the influence of the conspiracy theory interpretation is
certainly important in contemporary polemics which surround drug
issues, especially in the United States. In conspiracy theory, medicine
is a foreign power lodged dangerously within the body of the state, and
potentially subversive of the state's true interests. Opium is taken
into medical ownership because the doctors are expansionist - the
doctors are not of society but against society. A very different view
is that medicine is the .product of society, and is in fact often no
more than its agent or mere catspaw. Furthermore, the profession is not
a once-and-for-all product, but an organization continually reflecting
and influenced by the society without which it has no meaning or
existence. If this is correct, then far from society having to guard
against the medical conspiracy, medicine will have to be wary of the
risk of society's conspiracy to turn the profession into its too
obedient servant - the danger is that doctors will agree to incarcerate
addicts or otherwise act as agents of control, because society wants
addicts incarcerated or otherwise controlled and will subvert the
profession. It must, however, be remembered that the word `society' is
only shorthand for a vastly complex organization which is very far from
being unitary, while the medical profession also has many different
groupings and attitudes within it. The analysis might of course be
taken much further by considering what part of the profession has at
which time held what sort of two-way relationship with which other
segments and interest groups within the larger society. Perhaps the
story of drugs suggests that neither extreme - medicine as the
autonomous conspirator, or as society's poodle - is accurate. Medicine
in certain .contexts and at certain stages of history may, on occasion
(for better or for worse), generate its own initiatives - it may make a
grab at opium control in the interests of its own prestige, but even
then society as a whole is evolving in a manner which leads to this and
other professionalisms. In different contexts and in other stages of
development medicine appears to have done little more than passively
connive: doctors were not in general particularly keen to set up the
drug clinics of the 1 960s but were in effect ordered to do so by the
government. Most often the roots of action on any drug issue appear to
be mixed, with influences which interact and mutually amplify.
We
are here of course doing no more than touch on the surface of the type
of analysis which drug problems require if we are to understand fully
the role and function of a profession within a society. Enough has
though been said on this issue to suggest that historical
interpretation within the simple framework of conspiracy theory is
likely to betray the real subtleties. Medicine is no more a conspiracy
against the laity than society is a conspiracy against an otherwise
altruistic and disinterested profession. Their relationship is
symbiotic.
Addiction
The
supplanting of the simple idea of bad habit by addiction during the
latter part of the nineteenth century has been described in Chapter 13.
Here is an apparently straightforward example of the medicalization of
society's perceptions.
The concept of addiction is not just still
very much with us, but permeates society's ideas on drug use. Addiction
is written into legislation and it is the person addicted to designated
drugs who must be notified to the Home Office.
National Health
Service treatment of drug misuse focuses on treatment of addicts. The
word suffuses official documents, the treatment world, the research
literature both nationally and internationally, media discussion and
ordinary conversation on these topics.
The scientific world to some
extent agrees to use the term drug dependence as a latter-day
replacement for addiction, but one often has the feeling that the
speaker at the scientific meeting is likely to stumble and correct
himself as the new word is rather uneasily substituted for the old,
with 'drug-dependent person' a desperate circumlocution for `addict'.
The concept of dependence was introduced by the World Health
Organization" in 1964. The term was defined thus:
a state,
psychic and sometimes also physical, resulting from the interaction
between a living organism and a drug, characterised by behavioural and
other responses that always include a compulsion to take the drug on a
continuous or periodic basis in order to experience its psychic
effects, and sometimes to avoid the discomfort of its absence.
Tolerance may or may not be present. A person may be dependent on more
than one drug.
The purpose of this exercise in redefinition
appears largely to have been to get away from the stereotyped view of
addiction in teams 'of the opiate picture alone, and to substitute
varieties of dependence pictures, each related to a group of drugs.
Between these pictures there would be commonalities as well as
dissimilarities. In so far as the aim was to produce a nomenclature
more in accord with what is actually to be seen, the move achieved a
useful purpose - for instance, it invited people to look closely at the
alcohol picture rather than simply to ask whether alcoholism was or was
not a `real addiction', with its reality tested only by the extent to
which it accorded with the morphine picture. More covertly the
influence may have been to spread the net of medicalization even
further - the seriousness with which heavy use of barbiturates,
non-barbiturate hypnotics, amphetamines and of course alcohol would be
viewed could in some way be enhanced. From drug use of these types
being seen as giving rise to rather uncertain or second-class varieties
of addiction - habituation was a shadowy and intermediate concept -
they now each had their own dependence syndrome. Although no one seems
to have realized it at the time the promulgation of dependence was in
many ways the rediscovery of inebriety, with its drug-specific
sub-types. Inebriety had been an idea which held a wide group of
substance concerns together, and dependence could meet the same purpose.
For
the sake of simplicity we shall continue this discussion in terms of
the meanings which are today given to addiction, with due awareness
that in scientific circles it is sometimes the word dependence which is
being used instead, and that a fine-grained analysis would have to look
at the shades of difference between the meanings given these two words.
The terms drug misuse and drug abuse are also in circulation, often
with no very precise definition except the latent meanings of social
disapproval. But it is undoubtedly addiction rather than dependence or
any other rephrasing which is the word still to be heard in
conversation at the bus stop, the person uttering it having no thought
of its origin in nineteenth-century medicalization of the popular
vocabulary.
What meanings in our present twentieth-century context
are attached to addiction, and what are the influences and consequences
of this word? One approach to that question is to look at statements
which can be culled from medical and scientific writing. The attempt to
delineate professional views on addiction by picking out a particular
series of quotations could, though be misleading - the process is
inevitably selective and even with the best endeavours selection may be
biased. No one view or brief selection of views can accurately
characterize the position of a whole profession. But to tap what we are
searching for it is reasonable to look both at a few texts written for
specialists and at books written by drug experts who seek to inform a
general audience. It would indeed be difficult to find many relevant
major texts of recent years which have not felt compelled to tackle
this question of whether addiction is a disease, the nature of this
putative disease, and the social implications of giving addiction this
disease status.
One might wonder whether the repetitiveness with
which authors return to this issue and the lack of any finality itself
speaks to some fundamental unease and uncertainty whether medicine has
become lumbered with a metaphysical debate rather than a scientific
discussion capable of closure.
Is addiction in current thinking
still seen as a disease and, if so, in what precise terms? Here is a
quotation which shows that at least in some quarters the disease theory
in its most primitive and somatic guise is still very much alive
When
biochemical abnormalities are discovered in addicts (as I am sure they
will be someday), a new era of clinical research will open. Will these
abnormalities appear in all persons exposed to narcotics, or only in
some? Can they be replicated in animals? Can treatment restore the
change to normal? Can addiction be considered a metabolic disorder,
like diabetes, and its progress followed with a chemical index? These
are exciting questions, and are the ones that investigators will be
asking in the future.9
That passage, written in 1978, comes from Dr Vincent Dole, one of the most distinguished American authorities on drug addiction.
If
Dole's Position can be seen as a direct lineal descendant of the more
organic nineteenth-century views of addiction, the `moral insanity'
view, or addiction as impairment of will, finds equally direct recent
expression in the same volume of conference proceedings
An
obvious advantage with the disease concept of addiction is that it may
be of assistance in persuading patients to submit to a sensible
treatment programme. When we speak of illness, they realize that we are
not moralizing over their situation but understand that they happen to
have fallen into a situation in which they have lost normal voluntary
control.10
Loss of `normal voluntary control' is easily
recognizable as the descendant of Dr Thomas Clouston's `diseased
cravings and paralysed control'. And as was the case a century ago, the
disease formulation directly legitimizes the `sensible treatment
programme'.
Here next is a passage from a popular book on drug
addiction by Dr James Willis, a British psychiatrist specializing in
treatment of addicts
Thus to regard dependence on alcohol and on
drugs as a kind of disease does constitute a humane and a practical
approach in our efforts to understand a very complex area of human
behaviour ... Drug addicts and alcoholics are, after all, continuously
damaging themselves with toxic substances, and to act in this way is,
to say the least, an abnormal way of carrying on.11
The disease
concept is again seen both as humane and as `practical' or pragmatic.
And there is in addition the appeal to common sense - surely people who
behave in this wrong-headed way just can't be normal? The postulate
that we may as well look upon odd behaviour as ill behaviour is
tentatively and almost apologetically put forward.
Ambivalence as to
whether drug taking is disease or moral delinquency, the attempt to
wrap the two ideas into one package as addiction, the legitimization of
treatment by the concept of addiction - quotations from contemporary
twentieth-century sources suggest the continuation of a debate which
has been in the same state of confusion for many decades.
Another important theme can be picked up in an extract from a book published in 1975 by an American psychiatrist:
The
failure to recognize that drug abuse and addiction are symptomatic of
an underlying psychiatric disorder and psychological conflict ... has
the effect of a self-fulfilling prophecy... Parents, for example,
should take firm stands and insist on medical treatment when they
discover drug abuse behaviour in their children.12
Moral
insanity is here re-interpreted as underlying psychiatric disorder, but
there is the same axiomatic implication that treatment is needed, that
the doctor is the man immediately to be called in. Here is medicine
directly caught in the act of attempting to influence popular images.
A
further variant on the theme of underlying disorder, with the same
treatment implications, is that of personality deviancy. Here is a
fairly typical formulation of this type, given by a British doctor, Dr
George Birdwood, in 1969:
Voluntary treatment puts the
responsibility for his care on the addict himself, thus imposing a
strain that he is ill-fitted to bear. It ignores the widely accepted
fact that he is an immature and inadequate person... To expect such a
person to summon-up sufficient will-power to break his habit
permanently is patently absurd. 13
`Disease of the will' is
clearly a formulation which still thrives, but with the idea subtly
translated into underlying `immaturity and inadequacy', which then
predicate the need for compulsion. A personal view unsupported by
review of evidence is given the status of `widely accepted fact'. An
absolute explanation of addiction is offered that then speaks very
directly in support of an absolutist solution. The doctor is not only
again telling the people what to think, but in this instance is also
telling the government what it ought to do. 4
Searching
the contemporary drug literature offers rather the same pleasures and
excitements as browsing in an antique shop where there is the chance of
picking up a good piece of Victoriana. As this series of quotations
indicates, many of the nineteenth-century ideas on addiction as disease
are undoubtedly still in currency,' often in mint condition. As a
further source, we may take the twovolume handbook, Drug Addiction,
which has a German publisher but an American editor and largely
American contributors. It was published in 1977. The following
quotation comes from the scenesetting opening chapter, written by Dr W.
R. Martin, a distinguished and widely respected medical scientist with a lifetime's experience of work on opiates. He writes
Although
it is argued by some that drug abuse is caused by social deprivation
and assimilation into deviant sub-cultures, an alternative hypothesis
is that drug abusers share with other social deviants a disorder in
their thinking processes characterized by impulsivity, immaturity,
egocentricity, hypophoric and increased need states. It is proposed
that this disorder may have a hereditary basis or be a consequence of
or exacerbated by drug abuse and may be biologically transmitted...
Although psychopathy is probably the most prevalent and most costly of
all mental illnesses, it has received only modest attention from the
psychiatric and medical community... Although the United States
government is making a large commitment to drug abuse, only a small
portion of the funds are committed to basic research whose purpose is
to understand the disease and treat it. In order to develop
psychotherapeutic agents for the treatment of psychopathy, a concerted
effort must be made to synthesize and test new agents for their
efficacy. There is every reason to be optimistic about the development
of drugs for the treatment of psychopathy.14
Not so much a
statement as a manifesto. Psychopathy, described in intensely
moralistic terms, is an `illness', or indeed in a later passage a
`disease'. Social explanations of drug addiction are discounted, and
psychopathy (as biological condition) is seen as the underlying
disorder. These postulates legitimize drug treatment of drug addiction.
Furthermore, a platform is created from which to call for priority
funding of a particular type of biological medical research: in a
cost-conscious society the way to build the climate for research
backing is firstly to introduce a panic factor and underline the
costliness of psychopathy - `the most costly of all mental illnesses'.
The expectation is then held out to government agencies that research
money can deliver exciting goods - `there is every reason to be
optimistic'.
Here perhaps is a particularly revealing example of how
the same process runs through time, identical in its fundamentals but
with different manifestations in different social and temporal contexts
: medicalization in the twentieth century, goes _ on to become a vital
strategy for the winning of ,research funds _,as long ago as 1972 the
total annual U.S. federal budget for addiction research ran at
$42,218,o00.15 The social implications of the need to sell your
particular image of drug addiction and thus to foster your own
institution's research budget may go beyond the immediate influence on
the research world and budgetary allocations. For the process
inevitably means the lobbying of government. Successfully winning round
a government agency such as Washington's _ National Institute of Drug
Abuse to a particular view for the sake of research gain may then leave
behind a mark on that agency of much more pervasive influence. Research
within a particular mould has ripples of influence as it becomes the
training ground for the best young scientists, attracted to the
prestigious and wellfunded laboratory. The government agency has to
justify both to the public and its political masters the type of
research which it has backed, and the implicit definitions of what
should be society's priority concerns are thus further reinforced. The
distinguished researcher in his white coat is also often the man whom
the media interview, so that his image of addiction further influences
the public's awareness.
Images of addiction are in fact consistently
and relentlessly marketed - in the nineteenth century to make opium the
property of the medical profession, in the twentieth century to justify
the position of enforcement agencies or the international control
apparatus, or to win tomorrow's research budget Images compete, and in
the process the marketing becomes even more aggressive. The medical and
scientific images feed and change the public, administrative and
political view, and in return these perceptions give the doctors and
scientists the needed support. Processes become circular and
reinforcing. The most far-reaching consequences of the medicalization
of images are not what happens within the strictly medical sphere - the
hospitals and research laboratories - but the wider influences on
societal perceptions and national and international policies.
But
far more subtle and socially sensitive images of addiction are to be
found in some scientific writing than is conveyed by the selection of
quotations given above. A recent American research monograph on
heroin16 reviews a range of models and the objective evidence
supporting particular views, showing, for instance, the scientific
difficulties which still beset efforts to determine whether the seeming
prevalence of personality disorder among addicts is cause or
consequence of drug-taking. The research reported in that monograph was
itself conducted and interpreted within a learning theory model, and it
is interesting to see how the latterday psychologist's view of
addiction as learnt behaviour is in a way the rediscovering of `bad
habit'. Indeed, the psychologist in this regard brings the word habit,
used now in a strict technical sense, back into circulation.
It
would be a major research undertaking to determine precisely which
images of addiction - addiction as biological disorder, as `disease of
will', as evidence of underlying mental illness or personality
disorder, or as aberrant learning - have in different countries and at
different times been the most influential on different sectors of
society. We are not talking about just one type of model, or about
potential influence on a society in undifferentiated terms - the real
interest would come when one could document in detail which models
influenced this or that committee, what assumptions lay behind a named
piece of legislation, what was the idea at large in a particular suburb
when the residents opposed the placing of a drug rehabilitation hostel
in their midst." It seems possible that it is the sophisticated and
carefully qualified view of things that often remains in the
monographs, while it is the scientist who entertains no doubt whose
views most readily generate the wider influence. What views the drug
user himself entertains of his condition have seldom been thought worth
investigation - certain drug sub-cultures might even be the last
repository of the folk belief in bad habit, unforgiving and strangely
unmedicalized.
The meaning of treatment
The
nineteenth-century discovery that the addict is a suitable case for
treatment is today an entrenched and unquestioned premise, with society
unaware of the arbitrariness of this come-lately assumption. People may
debate the future direction of the National Health Service's Drug
Treatment Clinics, but any suggestion that the current model is
fundamentally mistaken in its assumption, that the treatment enterprise
should be closed down and people with bad habits left to their own
devices, would be dismissed only as outrageous and bizarre.
But
although there are a number of reasons for believing that the basic
postulate that addiction is a condition to be treated is the direct
descendant of the last century's evolution in thinking, much else in
regard to the meaning of treatment has changed.
In essence, the
nineteenth century evolved the treatment of addiction as a method of
dealing with the individual who in some way offended society's idea of
what was decent and orderly. It was not as if anyone could put forward
evidence that the condition was particularly life-threatening or
damaging to the health of the individual himself, nor was there much
evidence that the social demand for treatment was generated in any
large measure by the belief that the addict caused great trouble to
family and friends, or to other members of society. In the late
nineteenth century the leading image of the addict was of the
middle-class patient (often a woman) indulging in a self-regarding act
which was mildly damaging to health and perhaps a little bit of a
nuisance. The historical evidence given in Chapter 12 suggests that
this image of the class and sex characteristics of the addict was badly
out of focus, while even at the height of concern about morphine
addiction, remarkably few addicts were actually being admitted to
hospitals or nursing homes. The extent of learned debates on
therapeutic methods which were conducted in the medical journals was
out of balance with the actual treatment demands.
In so far as
treatment had a manifest clinical purpose it was therefore to save the
individual from his own behaviour, although the latent social purpose
of correcting unacceptable deviance must have been of equal or greater
importance. If opiates had produced compulsive drug-seeking without
physical withdrawal symptoms, the medical profession might not have had
such a ready opening for promulgation of disease theories, while if
alcoholism treatment had not provided a contemporary parallel and a
base for medicalization, treatment of opiate addiction might not have
become such a socially accepted idea. Without alcoholism, there would
certainly have been no Society for the Study of Inebriety.
For the
twentieth century up to the mid 1 960s, the British medical view on the
worth and necessity of treatment for opiate addiction settled down to
something more tempered than in the t 890s. The professional attitude
was now in the main that addicts were best left on their drugs unless
they wanted assistance to do otherwise, in which eventuality
nursing-home help would be arranged and a regime put into operation not
unlike the medico-moral treatment of former days. There was still a
lingering debate on the virtue of abrupt versus gradual withdrawal and
every now and then a resurgence of interest in introduction of
compulsory care. But behind the seeming sameness, two new elements had
during these years been added to the social meaning of treatment.
There
was firstly the birth of the belief that treatment was an ::
alternative to criminal handling of the addict. This, of course, came
about only after 192o, when the first Dangerous Drug Act made illegal
possession of opiates a criminal offence. From then onward, treatment
could award itself the accolade of being not only benign in itself, but
much more benign than the alternative model of response which might
otherwise have been chosen in Britain, and which was to be established
as the dominant response to addiction over many decades in the U.S.A.
Indeed, Britain only narrowly averted treading the American path when
in 1926 the Rolleston Committee18 ruled that it was acceptable practice
for a doctor to maintain an addict on his drugs if the patient could
not otherwise function healthily, or for the practitioner to prescribe
diminishing doses to other patients in a process of weaning. The
Committee accepted the illness model. Any absolutist intentions that
the Home Office may earlier have entertained were defeated, and the
doctors won the day. They were able to do so with authority because
they could still count on the doctor's right to define the nature of
addiction, which had been secured in the nineteenth century. Not only
opium but the addict was to remain medical property. It may, though, be
an inadequate reading of the significance of Rolleston to make an
interpretation simply in terms of a battle between the profession as
the force of righteousness, and the Home Office. Also to be taken into
account is that this committee marked the beginning in Britain of an
alliance in the drug area between `experts' and the bureaucracy of
control which goes forward to today's Home Office Advisory Council on
the Misuse of Drugs. The profession's championship of the illness model
might certainly in this instance be seen as being as much rooted, in a
determination to protect the doctor's right to prescribe and his
freedom from bureaucratic interference as in any desire to protect the
freedom of the drug user.
The second assumption which became attached to treatment during
this period was what might be called the doctrine of competitive
prescribing.18 British doctors did not themselves initially promulgate
this view of the function of treatment, but the idea came from American
commentators .20 These commentators drew inferences from the fact that
America prohibited opiate prescribing to addicts and had a large-scale
and intractable drug problem sustained by a criminally organized
black-market, and a problem unresolved by an expensive and punitive
enforcement programme. They pointed out that Britain, with a largely
medical response, appeared on the other hand to contain the problem at
a vastly lower prevalence level and to have no significant blackmarket.
The inference was that prescribing undercut the blackmarket and hence,
as well as its being a measure for dealing with the individual, it also
constituted a magically effective public health measure.
The degree
to which these two evolutions in the perceived function of treatment
were justified by the facts deserves scrutiny, again for the moment
taking the question as bearing only on the period from Rolleston up to
the mid- 1960s, when the heroin drug epidemic marked a general shake-up
in balances. As regards the idea that treatment was operating as a
benign alternative to punitive response, this contention was in
principle well founded: addicts who in America would have been
prosecuted were in England free of penal entanglement. The British
addict who forged a prescription or stole drugs might on occasion come
before the courts and likewise there may have been some exceptions to
the national approach in America, but the contrast between the two
national modes of response holds good. It must though be remembered
that the British had the advantage of having to deal with a much lower
addiction prevalence. As regards the contention that competitive
prescribing was responsible for there being only negligible
black-market activity, this question has been discussed at length
elsewhere21 and the conclusion must be drawn that this postulate was
based on faulty inferences and a flattering American mis-reading of the
British scene. The reasons why Britain had, over this period, a lesser
drug problem than America related most importantly to enormously
different social conditions in the cities of the two countries -
different patterns of poverty, urban decay, ethnic underprivilege and
entrenched criminal organization. The relaxed and gentlemanly British
way of responding to drugs waswitness to the small scale of the problem rather than the cause of that scale.
But
the idea that prescribing was an effective prevention policy was put
into circulation, and when the 196b heroin epidemic exploded in Britain
it was an idea which loomed large in importance for policy makers. The
pervasive fear was that the British epidemic would lead to a situation
where our cities might, before long, be faced with problems so sadly
familiar to America - endemic and intractable illegal narcotic use
particularly among young people, a drug sub-culture and a criminal
black-market. The debates and documents of the time amply chronicle the
acute official and public anxiety in this regard, and the determination
to avoid any move which by driving the addict into the hands of the
criminal dealer would `invite in the Mafia'. The nineteenth century had
seen addiction treatment as person-directed : the Second Brain
Committee report22 of 1965, the Dangerous Drug Act of 1967 and the
system of Drug Treatment Centres which went into operation in 196823
may seemingly still have been about treating the individual, but they
marked a shift in emphasis towards official belief in the social
function of treatment as preventive strategy. What was to happen to the
individual even became in some ways now of secondary importance. The
Drug Unit in Cambridge had the courage of its convictions, and named
itself a Containment rather' than a Treatment Unit. Giving a patient
injectable heroin in the name of treatment might be in the patient's
best interests, or it might not. There was a tricky and highly
responsible decision to be made every time a patient came to a clinic
demanding to be `registered'. It would be wrong to suggest cynicism or
any betrayal of medical ethics on the part of the doctors concerned,
but the fact is that the treatment system as it had evolved in 1968
subtly pressurized doctors into a position of conflict. They were
running a prescribing system probably for the good of their patients,
but they were now also operating as agents of a system designed not
only for individual good but aiming also to avert the spread of a
criminal black-market. What had previously been the speculative
American interpretation now became the root of British policy. This
development in the inner meaning of treatment and the consequent role
accepted by the medical profession provide an illustration of the
imperfections of explanations which see the profession as autonomous,
and for ever generating its own motivations as the independent state
within a state. Here was the control system covertly making the
profession its instrument of policy. That the doctors concerned now
worked for a National Health Service may in some ways have made the
profession more amenable to being cajoled, if not directed.
In the
1960s the social meaning of treatment also evolved two other new
implications. One of these was the idea that giving a prescription
would in a certain sense control the individual :E4 he would be brought
out from under cover, be in contact with an agency of society, counted,
discouraged from criminality, got into gainful employment, and
generally cleaned up. Again, such aspects of treatment could be seen as
in the patient's best interests, and for that very reason the
profession would be easily moved into this role. The other new element
in the treatment was that for the first time cogent reasons existed for
believing that opiate addiction, in the pattern of injected drug use
which had evolved, was profoundly dangerous to life and health. Addicts
were dissolving their heroin tablets in any dirty water that came to
hand and injecting themselves without regard for sterile precaution.
The common result was varieties of septicaemia, and the sharing of
syringes led to the spread of virus hepatitis. Deaths from injection
complications or overdose were frequently being reported, and such
tragedies were all the more horrifying because of the youth of the
population involved. It was a long way from a little quiet tippling of
laudanum: the longevity debate was supplanted by studies of coroners'
courts, which showed about 3 per cent of young drug addicts dying in
any one year .25 Whatever the other and more covert elements in the
meaning of treatment, traditional concern for preservation of life and
prevention of illness seemed therefore to demand energetic medical
commitment. Whether in the event the treatment offered achieved those
traditional goals remained an unanswered question. We do not know
whether prescribing drugs to this new wave of addicts, a group so
different from the patients known to Rolleston, averted or even
heightened the long-term likelihood of tragedy.
Thus
the fundamental
conclusion to be drawn here is that in different contexts there has
remained within society's repertoire of concepts something called
treatment of addiction. Study of the nineteenth century offers insights
into the origins of this treatment movement, and a preliminary view of
the inner complexity of themeanings and social motivations. As that
theme is followed forward, so the meanings shift and the complexities
multiply.
Has
anything other than the word itself remained the same in treatment? In
fact, rather like finding a few fossil animals remarkably alive and
well and even capering, it is possible to find some aspects of
nineteenth-century ideas of treatment still very much with us and
infecting our perceptions and policies. Such a direct follow-through is
evident in the ambiguous perception of addiction as both moral defect
and disease. The moral view forms the basis for the therapeutic
community movement. The disease concept, in traditional medical terms,
then continues to call for a therapeutic attack on the `physical
illness' itself. This latter aspect of perception might be seen as
contributing to faith in methadone maintenance treatment programmes.
To
substantiate those contentions, let us look first at some of the
evidence on therapeutic communities. In America there has been enormous
investment in establishment of such facilities for treatment of
addicts. Quoting again the available but rather outdated figures, there
were in 1970 about 4,000-5,000 addicts in the U.S.A. resident in these
houses.25 Britain, with a smaller drug problem, has never moulted a
therapeutic community programme on that scale, but since the 1960s a
number of communities have been active and have received government,
local government and charitable support. And the direct flow from
underlying concept of addiction to the actualities of treatment can be
seen in the following description of the Phoenix House programme in New
York by Dr Mitchell Rosenthal:
What Boorstein has stated for the
offender in general, I would re-emphasize for the addict population. At
the present time, the only approach to the problem which can deal with
the numbers involved and the ego defects present is the Therapeutic
Community ... To take it one step further, I believe the therapeutic
community to be the treatment of choice in the vast majority of cases
of addicts, regardless. of the availability of other methods.
Dr Rosenthal then continued:
Addictive
or character disorders suffer from a lack of identity, which can be
considered a deficiency syndrome ... Moral values are taught ... In a
Phoenix House the teaching of socialization and its consequent morality
is made both explicit and emphatic ... We regard antisocial,
anti-military, amoral and acting-out behaviour as `stupid'.28
In
considerable degree, the American concepts have been the ideas with
which the British houses have operated. In 1970, Phoenix House was
established in London. The idea of self-responsibility has been
emphasized by Mr David Warren-Holland, a previous director of Phoenix,
London:
The concept of self-help is vitally important to this
process. We believe it is essential the ex-addict be given ample
opportunity to help himself in his own recovery and to assume
responsibility for his life. Treatment of the ex-addict as helpless and
incapable deprives him of this opportunity and panders to his
manipulative and irresponsible behaviour .27
So far as the
therapeutic community is concerned, one may therefore wonder whether
nineteenth-century concepts have in this instance been transformed, or
whether in this movement they still find their original expression in
unaltered and pristine form. Jennings, with his The Re-education of
Self-Control in the Treatment of the Morphia Habit, sounds entirely
modern. But there can be no doubt that in both the U.S.A. and the U.K.
controlled opiate prescribing is quantitatively the much larger
treatment investment than therapeutic communities or any other
approach. The roots of maintenance clearly go back to the nineteenth
century, and Dr Anstie's writings of 1871 on controlled morphine
addiction at low dosage provide a ready text for today's drug clinics -
`Granting that we have ... a fully formed morphia-habit, difficult or
impossible to abandon, it does not appear that this is any evil, under
the circumstances' (see p. 142).
We have already argued in this
chapter that the prescribing of drugs to the addict in today's context
has multiple meanings, but the more biological views of the nature of
addiction may be expected to have their follow-through in the
justification of drug treatment of drug addiction. And such a
connection has been given very direct expression by champions of
maintenance. Methadone is seen as correcting some sort of defect state,
and a protagonist such as Dr Vincent Dole will argue that
psychopathological theories of addiction are ill-founded: for him the
seeming psychopathology is consequence rather than cause of addiction,
as witnessed by the psychopathic behaviour fading away once his
patients are maintained on methadone. By the same token, Dole would not
see psychiatric treatment for addicts as commonly needed. He
specifically rejects the view of the `moralists', and seeks to
establish a view of addiction as illness, in terms of a disease model
which would have been in accord with much nineteenthcentury thinking.9
Strategies for control
Another
important theme which must be traced out is the developing story of
society's attempt to control drug use and drug users. The story can be
seen as a process of continuing shift from reliance on informal
controls to belief in the need for varieties of formal controls.
By
informal control is meant a subtle and complex apparatus comprising a
host of manners, conventions, traditions and folkways, with attendant
systems of disapprobation for infringement of these rules and
expectations, and approbation for their observation, which together
will make known and felt what society expects of the individual in
relation to opiate use or anything else. As regards nineteenth-century
opium there would have been regional differences and variations in
rules according to age and sex and other definitions of social
position, rather than a universal norm. The norms which society
proposed would be internalized by the individual so that `he believed'
that it was right to take opium for his toothache, but wrong to drink
laudanum like a De Quincey or a Coleridge. Practices and beliefs in a
stable society would be transmitted through the generations - the
grandmother would tell the young mother what was the right use of
poppy-head tea for the sick child.
At the beginning of the
nineteenth century it was informal controls-alone and unaided - which
regulated society's use of opium. The control of drug use was embedded
in culture and was no more legislated or formally controlled than is at
present the eating of peas.
Exactly the same reliance on informal controls can be seen today among,
for instance, the opium-growing hill tribes of Northern Thailand, and
the anthropological literature is redolent with descriptions of Central
American and South American cultures which have unanxiously employed
potent hallucinogens such as .peyote and mescaline, within systems of
informal control .28 In our own society, aspirin provides a living
example of drug use left in the hands of the people, while with alcohol
we are betwixt and between - manners and conventions, but also
licensing laws.
But so far as opiates were concerned, our society
slowly and inexorably moved from reliance on informal controls to a
complex, rigid, anxious, punitive and absolute system of formal control
- the Dangerous Drugs Acts, imprisonment for illegal possession, the
addict notified to the Home Office, opiates the property of the medical
profession with the doctors themselves increasingly controlled, and
control in many respects internationalized by treaty. The story of the
origins of this astonishing shift is what much of this book is about.
What
are the reasons for the shift? One explanation might be attempted by
looking at the general disruption of society and culture brought about
by the Industrial Revolution in nineteenthcentury England. Many aspects
of the subtle and informal apparatus which controlled the individual's
behaviour by expectation and precept must have been smashed or put into
disarray. The existence of an apparatus which is otherwise un-noted and
taken for granted only becomes apparent when it is overwhelmed by rapid
socio-economic change. The same processes can be seen today in many
parts of the Third World, exemplified by breakdown in age-old informal
controls over drinking practices in the anomie of the squatter
compounds, the shanty towns, the villas miseras.29 Drinking in many
primitive cultures has b en closely controlled by custom, and the
African village where everyone in all his doings is intimately
responsive to cultural behest provides a setting where there is no need
for laws to regulate drinking. Go to the slums of Lusaka, and less than
a generation onwards people fall down drunk in the road as they spill
out of the beer halls. That country will now inevitably move towards
formal controls over drinking as a poor but inevitable substitute for
the disapprobation of the village elders.
A possible argument here
is therefore that what happened in regard to the shift from informal to
formal control of opiates in the nineteenth century was witness to
fundamental changes in the relationship between individual and society,
and it is tempting to stigmatize these changes as the impoverishment of
culture. In terms of this argument our stringent contemporary controls
bear witness to a profound distrust of the strength and quality of our
own culture. It can then be argued that the process becomes circular,
and that the more we legislate and the greater the number and the more
intense the stringency of formal controls, the more certainly will
informal cultural processes wither and fade. The analogy with aspirin
can be deployed to carry this point. Make aspirin a dangerous drug
tomorrow (the analogy runs), ban it from the supermarket and make it
available only on prescription (with due entry of that prescription in
the doctor's records on pain of prosecution), and within a generation
or two the present traditions of aspirin self-medication would have
gone without trace. Moves to put aspirin back in the supermarket would
then be certain to give rise to appalled protest.
What has been said
here about the weakening of culture, essentially by influences related
to industrialization, is in line with a type of analysis that is
today's conventional wisdom. To this conventional analysis is then
usually added a more or less passionate lament, a yearning for a
pre-industrial type of culture such as the townsman's fantasies of the
rose-covered cottage in which he has never lived and in which he would
in fact be singularly uncomfortable. The `proper lesson from history'
is not that we should yearn for the past, but rather that having
acknowledged that the balance between informal and formal controls
which any society applies to drugs is symptomatic of the cultural state
of that society, we should see that the total package of drug controls
cannot be dreamed up in terms of some absolute and disembodied ideal -
the controls must be congruent with the strengths and resources of the
society in question and the moment. 30 It may well be that the way
people live and order their relationships in a complex and multiple
industrial society will quite inevitably mean a heavier reliance on
formal and external controls. On the other hand, one should be willing
to question whether the present system of stringencies is indeed truly
congruent with society's needs, or whether it is to an extent an
anachronism, something which developed in a different context, an
apparatus nicely in tune with the past which gave it birth rather than
with the present which suffers its excesses.31 Religious tolerance may
not have been appropriate when there were fears of a Popish plot, but
we have successfully got rid of disenfranchisement on religious
grounds. Are our formal controls on drugs partly a lumber of the past?
Those who seek a radical solution to the drug problem would certainly
so contend, and would see the answer in a return to the right
personally to choose one's drugs as freely as to choose one's religious
faith.
How could the likely consequence of such a total removal of
controls be tested, other than by daringly making the experiment?
Inevitably those who would champion such an approach will be tempted to
use the historical evidence which has been laid out in previous
chapters to bolster their case - they will argue that when opium was
freely available not much harm resulted. Even if one believes that
temporal differences in social context, and injected drug use, make
nonsense of an over-simple attempt to slant nineteenth-century
experience of uncontrolled supply towards an argument for decontrolling
twentieth-century supply, historical evidence as to what happens to
population drug use in uncontrolled conditions must surely have some
relevance to general understanding of drug ecology when the equilibrium
is allowed to balance itself out without too much tampering. It is
worth looking factually at the historical evidence while holding over
the question of the relevance of that evidence to the present context
until a little later.
What then were the dimensions of population
opiate use and related problems with opiates which were experienced
during the nineteenth-century equilibrium period? Quantitative evidence
of a quality to satisfy the demands of the modern epidemiologist is
lacking, but nonetheless there are sufficient clues to allow a number
of important conclusions to be drawn. Firstly, the opium import figures
suggest that we are indeed justified in using the word `equilibrium'.
As noted in Chapter 3 the data show that between 183o and 1869 average
home consumption of opium per thousand population varied between two
and three pounds of opium per head. Given the imperfections in the way
in which the statistics were gathered, some of that variation may be
reporting error, although it is equally possible that occasional larger
variations may have, been masked. But it is reasonable, despite due
qualifications, to take as a conclusion that consumption under
conditions offree supply in effect plateaued out - there was certainly
no continuing steep escalation of the sort initially seen between 1 820
and 1840 when home consumption had risen from 21,000 lb. to a total of
47,000 lb. annually, even given the rise in base population.
The
second conclusion relates to the actual level of the plateau. Three
pounds avoirdupois amount approximately to 1.36 kg. The average
consumption per person at alb. per 1,000 population would therefore
have been 1,360 mg. of opium annually. A recommended single-dose level
for opium is today 6o mg. (containing about 6 mg. of morphine). This
would imply that between 1830 and 1860 the average user - man, woman
and child - was consuming in terms of today's judgements roughly 127
therapeutic doses of opium each year. It is fair to conclude therefore
that the plateau represented a very high level of population experience
with this drug.
There has recently, as regards population alcohol
consumption, been much interest among epidemiologists in how use levels
are distributed within the population, with the prediction that the
distribution curve will usually be skewed and with a long low upper
tail, rather than being represented by the familiar inverted U of the
normal distribution curve.32 The data are not available to reconstruct
how opium consumption would have been distributed, but obviously the
average alone does not tell us all we want to know - many people would
have been consuming less than the average, and equally certainly a
proportion would here have been consuming much more, and some people
very much more.
The third conclusion to be drawn from the historical
evidence is that the distribution of drug use was uneven over the
country. The Fens provide the obvious example of particularly high
usage rates, as borne out both by contemporary impressionistic accounts
and the poisoning figures.
What cannot be satisfactorily
reconstructed is an absolutely coherent picture of the prevalence of
addiction, or of harm resulting from opium use. Poisoning and suicide
figures are the only indices to hand, but there is no available way of
quantitatively estimating the prevalence of social problems such as
secondary poverty from diversion of wages, the influence on work
capacity, the impact on family and interpersonal relations, or the
number of accidents occurring under the influence of opium. A subtler
form of epidemiology would have been required than the sort of social
inquiry which was then practised. And it would be equally presumptuous
to suppose that such unmeasured problems were either frequent or,
because they were not adequately assessed, rare - we do not know with
confidence whether `opium sots' were common and commonly a social
burden, or whether they were uncommon and untroublesome. The hint is
though that incapacity from use of opium was not seen as a problem of
such frequency and severity as to be a leading cause for social
anxiety. The prime image of the opium user was dissimilar to that of
the wastrel and disruptive drunkard. Opium users were not lying about
in the streets, or filling the workhouses, or beating their wives. It
seems fair to conclude that at the saturation level which the plateau
represented, opium was not a vastly malign or problematic drug in terms
of its impact on social functioning. But the conclusion must at the
same time also be accepted that opium when freely available was,
indeed, a drug which could at the population level give rise to certain
definite health risks. The impact on infant mortality cannot be
quantified, and as has already been argued in Chapter 9 opium would
often have interacted with disease and malnutrition to produce an
unhappy result, when no single factor could be held solely to blame.
So
much then for a tentative set of conclusions. In a particular
historical period and in the social context of a particular country,
and with opium as a drug available only in oral form, we can begin to
see the outline nature of the equilibrium reached between the society
and the drug - a plateau at a high general level of usage and with
regional variation, no persuasive evidence of large-scale social
incapacity, but with associated mortality levels which, though not too
disastrous when matched against certain modem drug experiences, were
nonetheless cause for concern.
Exactly the same question concerning
the nature of the equilibrium between a society and drug use in
conditions of uncontrolled availability may be approached by looking at
certain recent accounts from special settings. For instance, Dr Charas
Suwanwela and his colleagues, writing in 1978,33 provided a view of
opium use and addiction among the hill tribes of Northern Thailand.
They found that varied and varying patterns of use existed:
It
is impractical to separate the occasional users into experimenters,
occasional and habitual users as in some reports dealing with urban
populations because of the hill tribe situation:
a single person
may shift from one to another pattern depending on illness and other
factors. The distinction between frequent users and addicts is also not
very precise. A person who was not using opium every day, requested to
be detoxified. On the other hand, addicts who personally accepted their
undesirable status were using variable amounts of opium with variable
frequency.
There is the inference here that counting addicts
might not have been a logically very satisfactory exercise in
nineteenth-century England.
Nonetheless, Dr Suwanwela managed to
design an operational definition of addiction for his survey purposes,
basing it on daily use and experience of withdrawal symptoms. Within
those terms, he found that addiction rates varied greatly from village
to village - from 16.8 per cent of population aged ten years and over
among the Hmong tribe of Ban Khun Wang, to 6.6 per cent among the Lisu
people of Doi Sam Mun. And here in microcosm is a restatement of one of
the conclusions which has just been drawn from the historical material
- given free availability, use patterns will be a patchwork rather than
a uniformity. Social and cultural context as well as supply will
influence the plateau which is achieved.
As regards the social
effects of addiction, the Tai report is largely dealing with smoked
opium rather than eaten opium, although some opium is eaten by these
villagers. The following passage conveys the complexity of the
situation:
When addicts were asked to recall their ability to
work before and after the condition, most stated that they were less
productive afterwards. Some, however, could not work at all previously
and opium kept them going. For example, a 39-year-old Meo male was
addicted for three years because of swelling of both legs and
generalized weakness . [after detoxification] he could not work
adequately. He decided to go back on opium, and has since been able to
earn a living as a farmer and as the village silversmith.
Some
addicts are said to be `rather lazy', and they `sleep late and work
only periodically'. No one, says this report, would want his daughter
to marry an addict. Addiction is disapproved, except among the elderly.
But it is also reported that `it is not unusual to see a villager who
has been addicted for 30 or 4o years actively working. These are indeed
productive members of the household.' The authors sum up the question
of opium's impact on social functioning by saying that there are `two
extremes with many in-between'.
As ever, there is need to underline
the point that different contexts will mean different consequences. But
there are inviting twoway analogies to be drawn between endemic smoked
opium in Thai villages and endemic British patterns of opium eating in
the nineteenth century. The conjecture that nineteenth-century opium
use, particularly in rural and agricultural settings, would not have
caused widespread social disability is strengthened. One begins more
closely to sense the possible texture of the problem, the fine-grained
detail of ordinary lives which history cannot by itself reconstruct -
multiple and shifting patterns of use rather than absolutes of addicted
versus not addicted, a bit of late-lying in the morning, extremes and
betweens. How many Fenland labourers may there have been who were able
to work only because of their opium?
One might also argue that the
nineteenth-century British opium experience has something to say to the
contemporary problems and policies of the East. Even with advancing
industrialization, with growing cities such as Bangkok, opium is a drug
with which a reasonable equilibrium might be expected to be
established, even with minimal formal controls. Twentieth-century
Bangkok and nineteenth-century Manchester are different contexts, motor
traffic and horse trams set different problems, smoked opium and opium
pills or laudanum may bring different consequences, but one might at
least conclude that endemic opium use in the developing world should
not be cause for panic, or for repressive measures which upset the
balanced ecology with consequences worse than the original situation.
S4 We are back to rediscovering the Royal Commission on Opium of the 1
890s35 - what they told us about India, what history tells us about
nineteenth-century Britain, or what the latter-day epidemiologist has
to say about Thailand all point to the likelihood that, with opium, a
society left to find its natural balances comes to no great harm. If
secondary poverty is the problem, this might be met by making opium
cheaper rather than by a prohibition which drives up the price.
Unfortunately
such a conclusion regarding the possibilities of sustaining a
reasonably unworried equilibrium with opium came in many ways too late.
Post-war international drug policy has been recklessly insensitive to
such considerations, and old patterns of opium use in countries such as
Thailand, Burma, Singapore, Hong-Kong, Iran and Turkey have been
attacked with crusading zeal. Possession of an opium pipe becomes an
offence, and in some countries the drug user has faced the death
penalty. Insensitivity has not been an accident, but the order of the
day, and it is obvious that policies have often been instigated which
are not related to the interest of the countries concerned, but are
motivated primarily by the interests of Western states which wish to
suppress the opium cultivation which fed the illicit heroin supplies
primarily of the United States. So far as large tracts of the East are
concerned, suppression of opium use has encouraged its substitution by
heroin because lesser bulk means easier surreptitious handling. There
is also a logistic attractiveness in heroin because the technique of
sniffing this drug is speedy and simple, and it does not require a pipe
or the other paraphernalia of opium smoking. It is also sometimes
stated that the mere fact that heroin use does not involve the
detectable smell of smoked opium makes the drug preferable where there
are alert police patrols.
To contend that banning opium in the East
has given birth to domestic heroin use in those countries as a direct
and simple consequence, and with no other factors involved, would be
too simple. But there can be little doubt that the sudden insult to old
balances often contributed to bringing about a worse situation than the
original. In addition to the effect which post-war policies may have
had on actual patterns of indigenous drug use, new images of `the drug
problem' have certainly led in some traditional opium-using cultures to
damaging criminalization of the user and to some diversion of health
care resources. In one or two countries, such as Pakistan and India,
special gifts of resistance have allowed the Western pressures in some
measure to be withstood, and the opium addict may still, without fuss
or bother, collect his drug each day from the licensed vendor.
Let's
now though take the discussion back to a consideration of whether the
nineteenth-century and twentieth-century evolution of British drug
control policies and the movement from informal to formal control is to
be seen as careless insult to ecology, aswitness to `impoverishment of
culture', or as something to be understood more sympathetically.
Movement
in drug control in Britain during the nineteenth century was a slow
evolution, much debated, at times much contested - an outcome from
manoeuvring between factions as well as the product of larger social
movements. The industrial revolution had upset an older ecology but an
equilibrium was restored. The movement towards formal control was not
an alien and insensitive imposition, but related to society's
increasing background concern with health and a willingness to
interfere in health matters, together with the availability of a newly
confident medical profession which was both self-seeking and the
servant of society's behests. Much of our present and more stringent
formal control system might be seen in similarly sympathetic terms:
unsterile intravenous injections make nonsense of easy comparison with
opium eating, young addicts who readily draw others into their -habits
demand a control response quite different from the stayat-home morphine
addict of the 1890s, the reality as well as the threat of black-market
enterprise is with us, and one would be hard put to argue that the
dangers to health could be remedied by removing all controls.
But at
the same time, it is reasonable to interpret the evidence as also
supporting a rather conflicting conclusion. Ecologies can indeed be
upset by clumsy interference. The Dangerous Drugs Act of 1920 was not
part of a smooth historical evolution, but a sharp and imposed change,
even given that war-time regulations and DORA 4oB may have paved the
way for this change. This is not theplace to go into the history of
that period in detail, but there-is, -the immediate feeling of contrast
with the movement which led, say, to the 1868 Pharmacy Act. Put simply,
the Pharmacy Act was the slow outcome of national debates and
manoeuvrings, while the 192o Act although having internal elements in
its genesis reflected for the first time the influence of international
pressures.
Since 192o there must be the uneasy feeling that there
are elements within the total system which have not developed in tune
with need, or which_ no longer serve the real needs. These remarks are
directed particularly to aspects of drug legislation which offer heavy
penalties for possession or supply of opiates. The young_ addict found
with a supply of heroin on him for personal use, can in theory be
liable to a prison sentence of seven years. If he were caught in
Piccadilly selling some of his surplus, he could in theory be liable to
up to fourteen years' imprisonment. In practice, sentences of this
severity are never in these circumstances handed down, and the upper
range of sentencing is reserved for largescale and professional
dealing. Furthermore, the possibility of a prison sentence for the
addict may be benignly used to move him towards probation and social
help. The fact is, though, that no _one knows exactly how this penal
system is working in practice, and an unknown number of addicts are
going to prison to no one's real advantage. The control system is not
here responding to con. text, but has in some sense itself gone out of
control.
It is easy to forget the extent to which informal controls
still operate - for every adolescent who accepts the opportunity to use
a drug there are many who refuse. The value and richness of such
informal mechanisms is neglected or insulted by `Health Education'
which attempts superficially to instruct from outside and from a
position of cultural ignorance. Research too very easily neglects these
informal processes as too elusive for the habits of thought of
investigators (and fund givers) who are willing to persevere with a
type of epidemiology which is concerned only with the counting of
cases. History itself must not of course be misused as simple-minded
Health Education for very different times, but the history of opium use
does at the very least repeatedly and remarkably point up the fact that
there are different ways of seeing things and doing things, and thus
lead to self-questioning. So far as our own times are concerned, our
vision of drug control has become too frightened and too mechanistic.
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