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When Good Drugs Go Bad
Opium, Medicine, and the Origins of Canada's Drug Laws
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MORE ABOUT THIS BOOK

Main description:

In the 1800s, opium and cocaine could be easily obtained to treat a range of ailments. Drug dependency, when it occurred, was considered a matter of personal vice. Near the end of the century, attitudes shifted and access to drugs became more restricted. Dan Malleck reveals how different forces converged in the early 1900s to influence lawmakers and set the course for the drug laws that exist today. As this book shows, social concerns about drug addiction had less to do with the long pipe and shadowy den than with lobbying by medical professionals, concern about the morality and future of the nation, and a burgeoning pharmaceutical industry.


Contents:

Introduction: Its Baneful Influences

1 Medicating Canada before Regulation

2 Opium in Nineteenth-Century Medical Knowledge

3 Canada's First Drug Laws

4 Chinese Opium Smoking and Threats to the Nation

5 Medicine, Addiction, and Ideas of Nation

6 Madness and Addiction in the Asylums of English Canada

7 Proprietary Medicines and the Nation's Health

8 Regulating Proprietary Medicine

9 Drug Laws and the Creation of Illegality

Conclusion: Baneful Influences

Notes; Bibliography; Index


PRODUCT DETAILS

ISBN-13: 9780774829205
Publisher: University of British Columbia Press
Publication date: February, 2016
Pages: 320
Weight: 652g
Availability: Available
Subcategories: Anaesthetics and Pain, General Issues

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