2 TALES OF ADDICTION - OPIUM AND NICOTINE

Authors
Citation
V. Berridge, 2 TALES OF ADDICTION - OPIUM AND NICOTINE, Human psychopharmacology, 12, 1997, pp. 45-52
Citations number
34
Categorie Soggetti
Psychology,"Pharmacology & Pharmacy","Clinical Neurology
Journal title
ISSN journal
08856222
Volume
12
Year of publication
1997
Supplement
2
Pages
45 - 52
Database
ISI
SICI code
0885-6222(1997)12:<45:2TOA-O>2.0.ZU;2-R
Abstract
The paper traces the different history of the concept of addiction in relation to the use of opiates from its history in relation to the use of nicotine. Addiction had its origin in the 19th century, specifical ly through the concept of inebriety, so far as opium was concerned. Fo r nicotine, the concept of addiction is a more recent arrival. The pap er identifies a number of factors which have contributed to the differ ent trajectories. These include different roles within popular culture and consumption; and the establishment of policy round the acceptance of addiction for drugs as early as the 1920s. Smoking, by contrast, r emained on the fringes of the 'medical model' at that time. Different concepts were subsequently supported by different medical coalitions. There has, in the post-war period, been psychiatric ownership of drug addiction by comparison with the initial public health/epidemiologic r oute for smoking. The paper argues that recent events - AIDS for drug use and the concepts both of passive smoking and of addiction for smok ing, are bringing the public health and addiction constituencies close r together for both substances. (C) 1997 by John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.