[net.med] 4 in 10 doctors uses mind-altering drugs

steiny@scc.UUCP (Don Steiny) (09/25/86)

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	    Four of 10 doctors in study used drugs
	

	Boston(AP) -- Nearly 40 percent of doctors under age 40 admitted
in a survey that they used marijuana or cocaine to get high with friends,
and a quarter of doctors of all ages said they recently treated themselves
with mind-affecting drugs.

	Overall, more than half the physicians and three-quarters of the 
medical students who participated in the Harvard University survey said 
they had used drugs at least once for self-treatment, to get high or
to help them stay awake.

	Only 1 percent of the doctors surveyed said their drug use had ever
caused them to give poor care to patients.

	Most physicians use these drugs only occasionally, if at all.  But
the researchers say medical students and young doctors are more experienced
with than drugs than are older physicians.  And they predict the proportion
of drug-taking doctors will grow as medical students set up practice and
take their habits with them.

	"Perhaps for the first time," they wrote, "appriciable although
small proportions of persons entering medicine have histories of extensive
drug use and dependence."

	But they concluded that the drug use they found "should not be 
cause for great alarm," because it simply reflects growing drug use
throughout American life.

	"When psychoactive drug use becomes a fad and is approved by the
broad spectrum of society, just about all groups get involved," said Dr.
William E. McAuliffe, the physicians and pharmacists as well, the people
who are usually the keepers of the drugs."

	McAuliffe, a researcher at the Harvard School of Public Health, 
published his findings in today's New England Journal of Medicine.  His
study was based on a random sruvery of 500 practicing physicians and 504
medical students in Massachusetts conducted in November 1984.

	Among older doctors, the most common questionable use of drugs was
self-treatment, taking opiates and tranquilizers for pain and stress without
seeking another phsyician's care.

	"Most people in medicine would recommend that someone not self-
treat," said McAuliffe.  "But my study shows that a fairly substantial 
proportion do at some time in their lives." 

	In the year before the sruvey, 25 percent of the physicians said
they treated themselves with a psychoactive, or mind-affecting, drug, while
42 percent had done this at some point in their lives.  

	Recreational drug use is mor common among young physicians.  The
study found that besides marijuana, these doctors use "the full spectrum
of psychoactive drugs," and this has become "an important cause of drug
related impariment for them."

	Over half of the doctors up to age 40 have used drugs recreationally
at some time in their lives.  However, 38 percent of those under age 40 
have continued to use drugs, mostly marijauan and cocaine, to get high with
friends.

	Santa Cruz Sentinel
	Sept. 25, 1986
	p. A-10


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Don Steiny @ Don Steiny Software 
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