American Decades
"How the Drug Dopers Fight"
Magazine article
By: George Creel
Date: January 30, 1915
Source: Creel, George. "How the Drug Dopers Fight." Harper's Weekly, January 30, 1915, 110–112.
About the Author: George Creel (1876–1953), a crusading investigative journalist, was a vehement critic of the patent-medicine industry. Shifting gears, he served the Wilson administration during World War I (1914–1918) as chairman of the highly controversial Committee on Public Information, a government agency designed to promote support for the conflict.
Introduction
Most of the laws prohibiting the sale, possession, and use of narcotics and other controlled substances are barely a century old. Throughout the earlier part of the nation's history, a libertarian attitude prevailed regarding these matters, which were once deemed private, not public, concerns. Self-medication had been the norm. Only...
[The entire page is 1930 words long]
1910's Medicine and Health Primary Sources
- "Nursing as a Profession for College Women"
- "How Physical Training Affects the Welfare of the Nation"
- Changes in Bodily Form of Descendants of Immigrants
- "Tobacco: A Race Poison"
- Painless Childbirth
- "The Endowment of Motherhood"
- "How the Drug Dopers Fight"
- "The Heart of the People"
- "Progress in Pediatrics"
- "Orthopedic Surgery in War Time"
- "War and Mental Diseases"
- "Some Considerations Affecting the Replacement of Men by Women Workers"
- Influenza Epidemic
- "The Fight Against Venereal Disease"
- "The Next War"
- Copyright Page
- Acknowledgments
