Social and economic costs of illicit drugs.Substance abuse and addition have changed he very nature of life for societies all over the world. One of the most important social and economic consequences of drug abuse is crime. This is especially so in urban areas, where crime associated with illicit drugs infects many long-accepted ways of doing even the simple things in life. It determines how people drive and park their cars, protect their homes and families, go to work, school, shopping or worship, and even how they look at one another. All of the component parts of the criminal justice system designed to protect the public by enforcing restrictions on the availability of drugs fall into the category of social costs of drug abuse. So do the costs of limiting children's freedom to play and learn, of narrowing one's own interests and groups, of circumscribing the quality of one's life. Economic costs that directly or indirectly are attributable at least in part to drugs include: higher car and home insurance due to property crime and loss; the costs of changing modes or routes of transportation; public spending to prevent abuse and enforce drug laws. Similarly, health costs associated with drug abuse have both social and economic prices: the spread of blood-borne and sexually transmitted diseases Sexually transmitted diseases Infections that are acquired and transmitted by sexual contact. Although virtually any infection may be transmitted during intimate contact, the term sexually transmitted disease is restricted to conditions that are largely through dirty needles or drug-related prostitution; overburdened o·ver·bur·den tr.v. o·ver·bur·dened, o·ver·bur·den·ing, o·ver·bur·dens 1. To burden with too much weight; overload. 2. To subject to an excessive burden or strain; overtax. n. 1. health care systems; higher public and private health care costs for everyone. Illicit drugs also help determine the cost of doing business. Functional impairment caused by drug use leads to: costly mistakes and accidents; higher job turnover and absenteeism rates; theft and other crimes; increased health care and disability costs, and more. Costs are passed on to consumers or, worse, can lead to lax safety and deadly accidents. Organized criminal cartels assassinate as·sas·si·nate tr.v. as·sas·si·nat·ed, as·sas·si·nat·ing, as·sas·si·nates 1. To murder (a prominent person) by surprise attack, as for political reasons. 2. officials, infest in·fest v. 1. To live as a parasite in or on tissues or organs or on the skin and its appendages. 2. To inhabit or overrun in numbers large enough to be harmful, threatening, or obnoxious. public life with corruption and develop ties with terrorist groups. Below are just a few facts o the social, economic, health and environmental impact of illicit drugs. * Identifiable costs of drug abuse, including drug-related crime Illegal drugs are related to crime in multiple ways. Most directly, it is a crime to use, possess, manufacture, or distribute drugs classified as having a potential for abuse (such as cocaine, heroin, morphine and amphetamines). costs, law enforcement costs and health costs, range from 0.5 to 1.3 per cent of gross domestic product in most consumer countries. * With rapid social and economic changes over the past several decades, there has been a dramatic increase in use among women and children in both developed and developing countries. Since many female substance abusers are of child-bearing age, negative effects on fetuses are a growing concern. * There is an increasing involvement of women in illicit production and trafficking of drugs. They are the predominant harvesters of opium in Asia and coca leaves in South America South America, fourth largest continent (1991 est. pop. 299,150,000), c.6,880,000 sq mi (17,819,000 sq km), the southern of the two continents of the Western Hemisphere. . Nevertheless, many cultures still accept some drug and alcohol use by males, while disapproving of it by women. * A recent trend is towards the use of multiple substances, with people moving from one substance to another or using drugs in combinations. Intoxication intoxication, condition of body tissue affected by a poisonous substance. Poisonous materials, or toxins, are to be found in heavy metals such as lead and mercury, in drugs, in chemicals such as alcohol and carbon tetrachloride, in gases such as carbon monoxide, and , poisoning and overdoses are increasing as these new combinations of substances are being used. * While cocaine use can lead to higher rates of acquisitive crime, its consumers also carry out a wide range of non-drug crime and non-criminal activity to support their use. * There are high rates of drug abuse among doctors, nurses, miliary miliary /mil·i·ary/ (mil´e-ar?e) 1. like millet seeds. 2. characterized by lesions resembling millet seeds. mil·i·ar·y adj. 1. personnel, business executives, truck drivers, pilots and workers on mass production assembly lines. * Estimates suggest that approximately 15 million people worldwide incur a significant risk to their health as a result of using psychoactive substances. One third of these users inject drugs, and many experts believe this figure to be underestimated. * The proportion of injecting drug abusers in national HIV/AIDS HIV/AIDS Human Immunodeficiency Virus/Acquired Immune Deficiency Syndrome populations ranges from countries with less than 10 per cent (United Kingdom, Belgium) to a number of countries with more than 60 per cent (Thailand, Italy, Myanmar and Spain). Most other countries are within this range. * Due to increased global consumption of illicit drugs, substance abuse-related mortality has more than tripled over the last decade. Recent figures suggest drug injection is responsible for between 100,000 and 200,000 deaths per year. * During cultivation of coca and opium poppy opium poppy Flowering plant (Papaver somniferum) of the family Papaveraceae, native to Turkey. Opium, morphine, codeine, and heroin are all derived from the milky fluid found in its unripe seed capsule. A common garden annual in the U.S. plants, growers use powerful herbicides, pesticides and fertilizers, often without technical knowledge of their use and potential harmful effects on the environment. * The intensification of coca cultivation in the Huallaga flood plain and adjacent low hills in Peru, as well as vigorous expansion into highland forest environments, is responsible for the annihilation annihilation In physics, a reaction in which a particle and its antiparticle (see antimatter) collide and disappear. The annihilation releases energy equal to the original mass m multiplied by the square of the speed of light c, or E = m of nearly 1 million hectares of tropical forest resources. * The destruction of the Amazonian rain forest for coca cultivation contributes to the loss of rare plant species from which future pharmaceutical drugs and other beneficial substances may be developed. One in six prescription drugs has a tropical plant source as an active chemical. * An estimated three quarters of the world's plant-based pharmaceuticals, including aspirin, quinine quinine (kwī`nīn', kwĭnēn`), white crystalline alkaloid with a bitter taste. Before the development of more effective synthetic drugs such as quinacrine, chloroquine, and primaquine, quinine was the specific agent in the treatment of , cocaine and morphine, have been derived from medicinal plants medicinal plants, plants used as natural medicines. This practice has existed since prehistoric times. There are three ways in which plants have been found useful in medicine. found following leads from indigenous medicine. Modern medicine has increased the potency of some of these derivatives, which have hit indigenous people through intravenous heroin and cocaine use and contributed dramatically to the escalating indigenous drug problem. |
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