Implications for Research
Since this article does not have an abstract, we have provided the first 150 words of the full text.
Excerpt
The abuse of drugs is not solely a medical problem. It is an array of different social, behavioral, and physiological problems in which the manufacturer, distribution, and use of medicinals is involved. While clinical practice presents an incessant panorama of behavioral issues to which the perceptive physician is privy, he usually is only minimally expert or influential in behavioral treatment and legal policy. This certainly is the case in the area of drug abuse.
Hopefully, physicians will sharpen the focus of their interest, develop appropriate skills, and seek the expertise of others whose competence is clear. For reliable knowledge, the traditions of scientific medicine require explicit definition of a number of quite different aims. What do we need to know to prevent the spread of drug abuses—about those motives and forces which initiate drug intake, those sustaining it, and those leading either to uncontrolled or controlled intake? What do we
Footnotes
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Read before the 14th Annual Conference of Mental Health Representatives of State Medical Societies, sponsored by the AMA Council on Mental Health, Chicago, March 16, 1968.
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Reprint requests to 950 E 59th St, Chicago 60637.








