Pubdate: Wed, 28 Feb 2001
Source: Japan Times (Japan)
Copyright: 2001 The Japan Times
Contact:  Central P.O. Box 144, 352, Tokyo 100-8691
Website: http://www.japantimes.co.jp/

THE LEGAL DRUG MENACE

We like to think of drug abusers as "them," people other than us. That
is wrong, says the International Narcotics Control Board in its annual
report released last week. It highlights the over-consumption of
controlled drugs in developed countries. And it underlines the culture
that makes drug use so prevalent -- and makes control of abuse so difficult.

The INCB report said there is growing acceptance of the use of
controlled drugs to correct mood and behavior in everything from
depression to eating habits. According to Professor Hamid Ghodse,
president of the panel of experts that produced the report, "up to 70
percent of long-term use of psychotropic drugs is irrelevant and often
prescribed for social reasons."

The views of the generation that aggressively challenged social mores
about drug use are now mainstream. While taboos over the illegal use
of soft drugs have eroded, attitudes toward use of legal drugs have
changed in tandem. Aggressive marketing by drug companies has
encouraged legal drug use; the Internet has made it easier to procure
them. The INCB report notes that it has also increased the potential
for error and intentional misuse.

The legal drug problem identified by the INCB is a part of the illegal
drug problem that most governments focus on. Drug use involves supply
and demand. Most high-visibility antidrug programs focus only on
supply, yet the only way to eliminate the menace is to attack the
demand side of the equation as well.

Treatment for the users of illegal drugs is critical, but countries
also have to be alert to the dangers posed by relaxed social attitudes
to legal drugs. The instinctive reach for some substance to "fix" a
problem only contributes to the drug crisis in societies. Drug abuse
is drug abuse, whether the drugs are legal or not.
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