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- More stats:
-
- Alcohol:
- o 140 million Americans use alcohol
-
- o 18 million of these abuse alcohol or are alcoholics.
-
- o 100,000 deaths are due to alcohol, and an additional
- 100,000 deaths are alcohol related.
- Cocaine:
-
- o 12.2 million Americans used cocaine at least once in 1985.
-
- o 250,000 used it weekly.
-
- o In 1986, there were almost 1000 cocaine-induced deaths.
-
-
- Now let's recalculate.
-
- Deaths per user:
- Alcohol = 100,000/140,000,000 = .07 % or 70 per 100,000
- Cocaine = 1,000/ 12,200,000 = .008 % or 8 per 100,000
-
- Deaths per abuser:
- Alcohol = 100,000/18,000,000 = .56 % or 56 per 10,000
- Cocaine = 1,000/ 250,000 = .40 % or 40 per, 10
-
-
- So even considering abusers, with advantage to alcohol (probably
- should be over 1%), cocaine is still healthier.
-
-
- By the way, you reported earlier the number 6000 for
- illegal drug deaths. But:
-
- o National Council on Alcoholism estimated that in 1985
- all illegal drugs combined killed 3562 Americans
-
-
- [Most of these numbers are gleaned from an essay by Ethan Nadelmann
- called The Case for Legalization. It is found in:
- The Drug Legalization Debate. (ed. Inciardi, James A.),
- Sage publications, 1991. ISBN 0-8039-3677-{X or 8pbk}.
- It is a good book and should be referenced in our FAQ file.]
-
- =============================================================================
-
- From: glo@globox.Eng.Sun.COM
-
- The exact numbers vary, depending on the source and their
- methodology. I have presented several sets of numbers here.
- In general you will see that the vast amount of money/energy/etc.
- applied to "illicit" drugs is quite misplaced if one is counting
- deaths or death rate per user.
- You may have access in your library to things like the Center for
- Disease Control Mortality and Morbidity reports and yearly summaries.
- The last one I looked at listed 800 something deaths a year
- for aspirin (and more for acetominephin (sp?) and ibuprofen) -
- verses 0 for cannabis (hemp/pot/marijuana/...).
-
- ============
- (on the back cover of The Emperor Wears No Clothes)
- "How Dangerous is Marijuana in Comparison to Other Substances?"
- Number of American Deaths per year that result directly or
- primarily from the following (selected) causes nationwide,
- according to World Almanacs, Life Insurance Actuarial (death)
- Rates, and the last 18 years of the U.S. Surgeon General's Reports.
-
- Tobacco....................................340,000 to 395,000
- Alcohol (not includeing 50% of all highway
- deaths and 65% of all murders).....125,000+
- Aspirin (including deliberate overdose).... 180 to 1,000+
- Caffeine (from stress, ulcers and triggering
- irregular heartbeats, etc.)........ 1,000 to 10,000
- 'Legal' drug overdose (deliberate or accidental)
- from legal, prescribed or patent medicines
- and/or mixing with alcohol e.g. Valium/alcohol... 14,000 to 27,000
- Illicit drug overdose (deliberate or accidental) from
- all illegal drugs................................ 3,800 to 5,200
- marijuana (including overdose)........................... 0 (zero)
-
- ------------
- The Emperor Wears No Clothes
- by Jack Herer
- available from:
- H.E.M.P. Publishing
- 5632 Van Nuys Blvd suite 210
- Van Nuys CA 91401 (213) 392-1806
-
- ============
- from Thinking About Drug Legalization
- by James Ostrowski
- Cato Institute Paper # 121, May 25, 1989 $2.00
- to order or for information, write
- Policy Analysis
- Cato Institute
- 224 Second St. SE
- Washington DC 20003
-
- pg 47 reprinted without permission (I didn't find "Copyright..." or circled-C,
- but they did say to contact them... I guess if you want to reprint
- the whole thing - what the hey - at $2.00 for 64 pages why reprint,
- just buy the whole thing from them!
- [ my (glo's) the posters notes in [] - glo]
- [ glo note: *xxx* used in place of underlines - glo]
-
- ===============
- pg 47
- Table 4 presents the estimated per capita death rates
- for each drug. (While a number of people have died as a result
- of marijuana *enforcement*, there are apparently no confirmed
- deaths traceable to marijuana *use*.) The figures for cocaine
- and heroin have been adjusted downward, in accordance with
- the previous analysis, to include only those deaths due to drug
- use per se. The unadjusted death rate for these drugs is in
- parentheses.
-
- [glo note: the "previous analysis" details how overdose due to]
- [ variable strength and toxic reactions and infections due to]
- [ the uncontrolled black market in drugs causes most of the]
- [ deaths due to "heroin and cocaine" use - glo]
-
- Estimated Per Capita Death Rates by Drugs
- ----------------------------------------------------------
- Drug Users Deaths per Year Deaths per 100,000
- ----------------------------------------------------------
- Tobacco 60 million 390,000 (a) 650
- alcohol 100 million 150,000 (b) 150
- Heroin 500,000 400 (c) 80 (400)
- Cocaine 5 million 200 (c) 4 (20)
- ----------------------------------------------------------
-
- [ glo note: the astute reader will notice that even contaminated]
- [ street heroin is safer than cigarettes, and cocaine is much safer]
- [ than even alcohol. (the crack form is apparently more addicting]
- [ than alcohol - but not nicotine, powder is less addicting than alcohol -]
- [ see "Hooked Not Hooked") Pot is, well..., "absolutely safe" in]
- [ terms of causing death itself. And how many traffic deaths per]
- [ year: 20,000+ ? - glo]
-
- (a) "Reducing the Health Consequences of Smoking:
- 25 Years of Progress" Surgeon General's Report (1989).
-
- (b) Estimates vary greatly, depending upon whether all health
- consequences, or only those traditionally associated with
- alcoholism, are considered. The Fifth Special Report to the
- U.S. Congress on Alcoholism and Health from the Secretary of
- Health and Human Services contains two references indicating
- a death toll of 200,000: The report states, first, that alcohol
- "plays a role in 10% of all deaths in the United States,"
- which comes to about 200,000 deaths each year. P. vi. It further
- states that present estimates of the death toll from alcohol
- abuse are as high as 93.2 per 100,000. Ibid., p. x. This
- ratio translates into a total of about 210,000.
-
- (c) These figures were determined as follows: Drug Abuse Warning
- Network (DAWN) heroin and cocaine fatalities for 1984, 1985,
- and 1986 were averaged. The number of suicides was subtracted.
- The figures were discounted to account for deaths in which
- both heroin and cocaine played a role. Since DAWN covers
- about one-third of the nation's population but almost all
- major urban areas where drug use florishes, totals were doubled
- to arrive at yearly estimates of 2,000 for heroin deaths and
- 1,000 for cocaine deaths. Finally, these figures were dis-
- counted by 80 percent in accordance with the analysis presented
- in the text
-
- ========== end of table 4, pg 47======================
-
- and if you want to get some info on addiction, find this magazine article:
- (and its references)
- Hooked Not Hooked
- by Deborah Franklin
- In Health (ISSN 1047-0549)
- November/December 1990 Volume 4 Number 6
- (no address for back issues listed, main address:)
- In Health
- c/o Hippocrates Partners
- 475 Gate 5 Road suite 225
- Sausalito CA 94965
-
- =============================================================================
-
- From: hagerp@iuvax.cs.indiana.edu
- Date: 7 Sep 91 19:25:39 GMT
- Newsgroups: alt.drugs
- Subject: For your perusal -- U.S. Surgeon General's Actuarial info
-
- The following is a list of deaths by substance for 1990.
-
- Tobacco . . . . . . . . . . . . 360,000 [legal]
- Alcohol . . . . . . . . . . . . 130,000 [legal]
- Prescribed drugs . . . . . . . 18,675 [legal]
- Caffeine . . . . . . . . . . . 5,800 [legal]
- Cocaine . . . . . . . . . . . . 2,390 [illegal]
- Heroin . . . . . . . . . . . . 2,147 [illegal]
- Aspirin . . . . . . . . . . . . 986 [legal]
- Marijuana . . . . . . . . . . . 0 [illegal]
-
- =============================================================================
-
- Date: Wed, 23 Jun 1993 14:35:10 -0700 (PDT)
- From: Leora Lawton <LLAWTON@USCVM.BITNET>
- Subject: drug survey results
- To: Multiple recipients of list DRUGABUS <DRUGABUS@UMAB.BITNET>
- Message-id: <01GZPZ3KAOYQ8WW43H@YMIR.CLAREMONT.EDU>
-
- WASHINGTON (AP) _ Illegal drug use is off sharply among American
- teen-agers and adults with one glaring exception: those 35 and
- older.
- Those were the key findings from an annual survey on drug abuse
- released Wednesday by federal health officials.
- Some 11.4 million Americans age 12 or older were classified as
- current users of illegal drugs in 1992, down 11 percent from almost
- 13 million drug users a year earlier. That means they had used
- drugs in the month before the survey.
- The number has been declining steadily since 1979, when the same
- survey indicated that 24 million Americans had used illicit drugs.
- Adults 35 and older _ including the baby boomers who grew up in
- the permissive 1960s _ are bucking the trend. Use of drugs in that
- age group is the same now as it was back in 1979.
- The older adults now comprise 23 percent of illegal drug users,
- compared to just 10 percent in 1979.
- The number of current cocaine users plummeted 31 percent from
- 1.9 million in 1991 to 1.3 million in 1992. The federal Substance
- Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration, which conducted
- the survey, said that was down from a peak of 5.8 million in 1985.
- Occasional cocaine use _ less than once a month _ was down by
- 900,000, to 3.4 million. But the number of frequent users _ at
- least weekly _ stood unchanged at 640,000.
- Marijuana remains the illegal drug of choice, used by 78 percent
- of those who tried illegal drugs in 1992.
- An estimated 98 million Americans drank alcohol in the month
- before the survey; 10 million were defined as heavy drinkers _ five
- or more drinks on five or more days in the past 30 days.
- The survey also indicated that 54 million Americans, or 26
- percent of the population, were cigarette smokers. Some 7.5 million
- used smokeless tobacco.
- Other statistics:
- _Six percent of 12-to-17-year-olds were current users of illegal
- drugs; 13 percent of 18-to-25-year-olds and 10 percent of
- 26-to-34-year-olds used drugs.
- _Most illegal drug users were white (8.7 million or 76 percent);
- 14 percent were black (1.6 million); 8 percent were Hispanic
- (900,000).
- _More men than women used illicit drugs: 7.1 percent versus 4.1
- percent.
- _Almost 21 percent of unemployed 18-to-34-year-olds were illegal
- drug users, nearly double the rate for those with jobs.
- The survey was based on in-person interviews of 28,832 people
- who were promised confidentiality.
-
- =============================================================================
-
- From: Charlie Ksir <cksir@UWYO.EDU>
- Date: Thu, 21 Apr 1994 10:31:10 -0600
- Subject: Re: choices
-
- >Richard Hammersley writes:
- >
- >>Surely traffic accidents are the most common fatal result of drug abuse
- >>and I hope this list doesn't separate off alcohol from drugs.
- >
- Dan Drumm replies:
- >
- >I thought it was lung cancer, then traffic accidents.
- >I don't know what comes next, but I sure would be interested if
- >anyone can reference any research on this.
- >
-
- In this context, I expect it's really heart disease first. I assume Danny
- was talking about tobacco. A table published in 1991 by the US Centers
- for Disease Control, based on 1988 data, estimates something called
- "Smoking-Attributable Mortality" as follows:
-
- All heart diseases : 150, 320
- Cancer of lung, trachea, & bronchus: 111,985
-
- Other non-cancerous respiratory diseases, including bronchitis, emphysema,
- chronic airways obstruction, pneumonia, & influenza add up to 81,339.
-
- And let's not forget the circulatory problems other than coronary heart
- disease: add up smoking-attributable deaths from hypertension, strokes,
- atheroschlerosis, aortic aneurysm, and "other arterial disease", and you
- get 50,682.
-
- I just grabbed the 1987 Alcohol & Health report to the U.S. Congress off my
- shelf ('m sure there's a newer one around here somewhere, but can't lay my
- hands on it). Estimated mortality data in it were based on 1980 numbers,
- and had motor vehicle traffic accidents attributable to alcohol at 25, 965.
- That estimate would be smaller today, because total traffic accidents are
- down from over 50,000 in 1980 to under 40,000, and the proportion of
- fatally-injured drivers with a BAL > 0.10 declined from over 50% in 1980 to
- about 40% (last stuff taken from Ray & Ksir, 1993). Let's say about
- 20,000.
-
- If the question was, what's the "most common fatal result of drug (ab)use",
- including alcohol and tobacco, then heart disease is the winner, especially
- when you consider that heavy alcohol use also contributes to heart disease.
- Various cancers would be next, since smoking is associated with other
- kinds of cancer besides lungs (mouth, esophagus, pancreas, etc), and
- alcohol is too (mouth, stomach). The total would approach the heart
- disease total. Next would be other respiratory diseases, to which alcohol
- contributes a few thousand extra pneumonia and influenza deaths, and then
- circulatory problems (alcohol adds a few here, too). All of these are way
- above the number of alcohol-attributed traffic accidents.
-
- There are other differences, of course. The average age of an
- alcohol-related traffic fatality is much younger than the avergae age of
- those dying from these "diseases of chronic exposure", and may be seen
- therefore as more tragic in that same way that a drug overdose death or
- suicide of a young person is seen. On the other hand, these younger
- victims have a greater chance of dying quickly, whereas most of the deaths
- attributable to chronic smoking or drinking result in long, painful, and
- expensive illnesses before death.
-
- Hope this morbid thread doesn't have too long a life, but I thought I could
- contribute some official US Government data.
-
- .... Charlie Ksir The opinions herein are my own,
- .... University of Wyoming so leave my employer alone.
-
-
-