Cocaine - Usage Trends
Usage Trends
When cocaine became popular in the late 1870s, it was thought to be a non-addictive "cure-all." The drug was routinely found in family medicine cabinets, and its use was completely legal. Cocaine use was accepted among factory workers to boost energy and ensure peak efficiency. But by the 1890s, cocaine had become an increasingly abused recreational drug, taken purely for the high it produced in users. During this time of widespread use, medical journals began to report on the toxic and addictive properties of cocaine.
The Era of Prohibition
Public support turned against cocaine around the same time that efforts were being made to ban alcohol in the United States. From 1920 to 1933, a nationwide ban existed on the manufacture and sale of all alcoholic beverages. This was known as the era of prohibition. At that time, alcohol was viewed as a destructive force in society. Crime, poverty, gambling, prostitution, and declining family values were blamed on excessive alcohol use. Even before this great push for Prohibition, however, the Harrison Act of 1914 was passed. This act classified cocaine as a narcoticA painkiller that may become habit-forming; in a broader sense, any illegally purchased drug. and prohibited its use in the United States except as a local anesthetic. Tough drug laws were passed between the 1930s and the 1960s, and cocaine use dropped dramatically.
It was not until the 1970s that cocaine use began to rise once more. The drug became part of the disco scene, an era well known for its glittery nightlife, brightly lit dance clubs, outrageous outfits, and distinctive music. Cocaine gave clubbers the energy to dance the night away. Powder cocaine was quite expensive, though, and by the 1980s a new and cheaper form of the drug was being manufactured. It was called crack cocaine, and it was inexpensive enough to appeal to middle- and lower-income buyers. Crack can be smoked, it delivers a more intense high than powder cocaine, and it costs about one-tenth the price. Drug dealers had opened up a whole new market, and hundreds of thousands of new users became hooked on crack.
Cocaine use peaked in 1985 when the number of Americans who had ever used cocaine soared to 25 million. In response to the increase in cocaine-related hospital emergency visits, crack gained
a reputation as the most destructive and addictive drug of the 1980s. The Anti-Drug Abuse Act of 1986 and 1988 was passed, making possession of crack a far more serious offense than possession of powder cocaine.
By the time the law was passed, cocaine use was already on its way down. It declined steeply until 1992, when the trend once again reversed. According to the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, the cocaine-using population had crept back up to about 3 million people by 1993. The gradual increase continued. By 1999, reported cocaine use hit 3.7 million or 1.7 percent of Americans.
Four years later, the 2003 National Survey on Drug Use and Health (NSDUH), conducted by the Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration (SAMHSA), showed a downward trend in cocaine use among Americans. About 2.3 million persons were classified as "current cocaine users" that year, and 604,000 of those users smoked crack. Rates of use were highest among people age eighteen to twenty-five, with 2.2 percent of that age group using powder cocaine.
User Characteristics
The typical cocaine user comes from a large metropolitan area rather than a small town, but these metropolitan areas span the entire country. In other words, cocaine is abused widely throughout the big cities of the United States, with no concentration of use showing up in any specific state or section of the country.
According to "Pulse Check," a report available on the Office of National Drug Control Policy Web site, as of January 2004, the characteristics of powder cocaine users had not changed. The crack-using population, however, was aging considerably. Only in Cleveland, Ohio, and St. Louis, Missouri, were there reports of new use among young people. The results of the Monitoring the Future (MTF) survey, a joint effort of the University of Michigan and the National Institute on Drug Abuse (NIDA), seemed to back up these results. Annual use of powder cocaine among tenth and twelfth graders rose about one-half of 1 percent between 2003 and 2004. However, increases in crack cocaine use were reported to be much lower.
No single risk factor predicts cocaine use, but a person's willingness to take risks is often a factor in his or her decision to try it for the first time. Young people who smoke cigarettes are ten times as likely to use an illegal drug than their nonsmoking peers. In the past, students who used cocaine had to be willing to be very different from the norm. The trend of acceptance began changing in the 1990s, however. According to the 2004 MTF study, the perceived risk and disapproval of powder cocaine and crack use decreased among eighth, tenth, and twelfth graders.
