Drugs - Without the Hot Air: Minimising the Harms of Legal and Illegal Drugs
Material type:
- 9781906860165
- 362.29/NUT
Item type | Current library | Collection | Call number | Status | Date due | Barcode | Item holds | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
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Colombo General Stacks | Non-fiction | 362.29/NUT |
Available
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CA00014623 |
Enhanced descriptions from Syndetics:
Winner of:
Transmission Prize for the Communication of Ideas 2014
Highly Commended, Popular Medicine, British Medical Association awards From health to family to society, this informative exploration takes an evidence-based view of all the factors involved in drug use. Applying the same objective criteria to legal and illegal substances, an argument is made that legality is not a clear measure for harm. Tackling a variety of questions, such as Which is more harmful--Ecstasy or alcohol? Can addiction be cured? and Does the "War on Drugs" have serious unintended effects that can hurt children? , this analysis equips readers with the ability to make educated decisions regarding drugs both personally and in their communities. Broadening the scope of the discussion, a framework is explored for formulating national drug policies that will minimize a myriad of harms--social, medical, criminal, financial, and environmental.
£12.99
Table of contents provided by Syndetics
- 1 Why I had to write this book (p. 1)
- Who this book is for (p. 6)
- 2 Is ecstasy more dangerous than horse riding? (p. 9)
- Go compare (p. 10)
- Equasy (p. 13)
- What is ecstasy? (p. 14)
- Does ecstasy kill? (p. 15)
- What are the other harms of ecstasy? (p. 16)
- Ecstasy in the media (p. 17)
- Ecstasy: a moral issue (p. 20)
- Why measuring drug harms frightens politicians (p. 22)
- Ecstasy and post-traumatic stress disorder (p. 24)
- 3 How can we measure the harms done by drugs? (p. 30)
- Why measure? (p. 30)
- Sixteen different sorts of harm (p. 32)
- Multi-criteria decision analysis (p. 35)
- The expert panel (p. 36)
- Which drugs did the expert panel consider? (p. 38)
- Rating the drugs (p. 39)
- Weighting the scores (p. 41)
- Results (p. 43)
- Limitations of the model (p. 45)
- Critical reception (p. 45)
- Conclusion (p. 46)
- Reviewing a drug's Class? The case of ketamine (p. 47)
- 4 Why do people take drugs? (p. 51)
- How drugs evolved (p. 51)
- Chemicals in the human brain (p. 51)
- A typical day without drugs (p. 52)
- What is a drug? (p. 54)
- 1 Opioids - opium, heroin, methadone, ... (p. 55)
- 2 Stimulants or "uppers" - cocaine, amphetamine, ... (p. 56)
- 3 Depressants or "downers" - alcohol, benzodiazepines, GHB (p. 57)
- 4 Psychedelics - LSD, mushrooms, ... (p. 57)
- Less easily-classified drugs (p. 58)
- A typical day on drugs (p. 60)
- A brief history of drug use (p. 61)
- Why do people take drugs? (p. 65)
- Why this matters (p. 68)
- 5 Cannablis, and why did Queen Victoria take it? (p. 72)
- Cannabis as hemp (p. 72)
- Cannabis as a drug (p. 73)
- What are the benefits? (p. 74)
- What are the harms? (p. 75)
- Cannabis routes of use (p. 76)
- Is skunk more harmful than hash? (p. 78)
- Why did cannabis stop being seen as a medicine? (p. 79)
- Medicinal cannabis use in the UK today (p. 82)
- Conclusion (p. 84)
- Does cannabis cause schizophrenia? (p. 85)
- 6 If alcohol were discovered today, would it be legal? (p. 91)
- How the drinks industry influences alcohol policy (p. 93)
- How can we reduce the harm done by alcohol? (p. 104)
- Conclusion (p. 109)
- 7 "Meow meow" - should mephedrone have been banned? (p. 114)
- "Meow meow" (p. 114)
- What is mephedrone and why is it called plant food? (p. 116)
- The harms and benefits of taking mephedrone (p. 117)
- Why was mephedrone banned? (p. 118)
- The designer drug problem (p. 120)
- Alternative approaches (p. 121)
- The very least we ought to know (p. 123)
- Conclusion (p. 124)
- The original cathinone: khat (p. 126)
- 8 What is addiction? Is there an "addictive personality"? (p. 132)
- Addiction in history (p. 133)
- The brain mechanisms of addiction (p. 135)
- What is tolerance and why does it occur? (p. 139)
- Withdrawal and craving (p. 141)
- Diagnosing addiction (p. 143)
- Is there an "addictive personality"? (p. 145)
- Protective factors - why some people don't get addicted to drugs (p. 148)
- Conclusion (p. 149)
- How does neuroimaging work? (p. 150)
- 9 Can addiction be cured? (p. 155)
- Introduction (p. 155)
- Case study 1 Tony Adams and alcohol (p. 155)
- Case study 2 Pete Doherty, heroin and crack (p. 156)
- Case study 3 Amy Winehouse (p. 156)
- Psychological treatments (p. 157)
- Pharmacological substitutes (p. 159)
- Other pharmacological treatments (p. 160)
- What is heroin? (p. 161)
- Why do people take heroin, and why can't they stop? (p. 162)
- Using heroin to treat heroin addicts (p. 164)
- Advantages and disadvantages of methadone treatment (p. 164)
- Buprenorphine - a better solution? (p. 166)
- Evaluating treatments (p. 167)
- The Portuguese experiment (p. 170)
- Preventing addiction (p. 172)
- Conclusion (p. 173)
- 10 Cocaine - from chewing to crack (p. 177)
- Routes of use and main associated harms (p. 177)
- Why are drugs used in different forms? (p. 179)
- Kinetics and dynamics of addiction (p. 179)
- From chewing to crack: the history of cocaine (p. 181)
- Why is crack twice as addictive as cocaine? (p. 186)
- Conclusion (p. 187)
- The international damage done by cocaine (p. 188)
- 11 Why was smoking banned in public places? (p. 192)
- The 2007 ban on smoking in public places in the UK (p. 192)
- What is tobacco? (p. 193)
- What are tobacco's harms and benefits? (p. 194)
- How do we know that smoking causes lung cancer? (p. 197)
- Why is smoking so addictive? (p. 199)
- Public-health responses and industry resistance (p. 202)
- Consequences of the UK smoking ban (p. 204)
- Freedom and choice (p. 206)
- Conclusion (p. 208)
- 12 Prescription drugs (p. 216)
- What are benzodiazepines and how do they work? (p. 217)
- What are the benefits and harms of benzodiazepines? (p. 217)
- Antidepressants and SSRIs (p. 221)
- Painkillers (p. 224)
- The pharmaceutical industry and science (p. 225)
- The mental-health epidemic (p. 227)
- Informed consent (p. 229)
- Conclusion (p. 230)
- 13 Can drugs improve performance? (p. 232)
- Muscle and power (p. 232)
- Other drugs in sport (p. 237)
- Improving mental performance - cognition enhancers (p. 238)
- Conclusion (p. 244)
- 14 Psychedelics - should scientists try LSD? (p. 247)
- How do psychedelics work? (p. 247)
- The discovery of LSD (p. 248)
- LSD and psychiatry (p. 250)
- Set and setting (p. 251)
- LSD leaves the laboratory (p. 252)
- What are the harms of LSD and psychedelics? (p. 254)
- What are the benefits of psychedelics? (p. 255)
- Should scientists take LSD? (p. 256)
- Mushrooms and other psychedelics (p. 258)
- Why were magic mushrooms banned in the UK? (p. 260)
- Conclusion (p. 261)
- 15 The War on Drugs, and drugs in war (p. 264)
- The other "war on drugs" (p. 264)
- Amphetamines and war (p. 265)
- The aims of the War on Drugs (p. 267)
- A Has the War on Drugs reduced supply? (p. 269)
- B Has the War on Drugs reduced demand? (p. 271)
- C Has the War on Drugs minimised harm? (p. 273)
- Why are we still at war? (p. 280)
- What are the alternatives? (p. 282)
- Comparing the harms of cannabis and prison (p. 283)
- 16 The future of drugs (p. 292)
- Genetic sequencing (p. 292)
- What are the risks of genetic sequencing? (p. 295)
- Treating addiction (p. 296)
- Learning and unlearning (p. 297)
- New drugs research (p. 299)
- The Brain Science, Addiction and Drugs Foresight programme (p. 300)
- What sort of future do we want? (p. 304)
- 17 What should I tell my kids about drugs? (p. 307)
- Young people and drugs (p. 307)
- 1 Alcohol and tobacco are drugs (p. 308)
- 2 All drugs can potentially cause harm (p. 309)
- 3 Tell your kids about drugs from an early age (p. 309)
- 4 Never inject (p. 310)
- 5 Don't use solvents (p. 310)
- 6 Don't take drink and drugs at the same time (p. 310)
- 7 A criminal record could ruin your career (p. 311)
- 8 Find good sources of advice (p. 312)
- 9 If you do take drugs, be clear why (p. 312)
- 10 If you do get into trouble with drugs, get help quickly (p. 313)
- 11 If you use drugs, don't let them interfere with school (p. 314)
- Butane and other solvents (p. 315)
- URLs (p. 317)
- Index (p. 326)
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