Drug Education and Vice Control
Drug Education and Vice Control
Drug Education and Vice Control
vice control
Why People turn to Drugs
1. Family Problems
2. Peer pressure Curiosity
3. Weak Personality, desire to scape
from reality
4. Lack of self confidence and
inferiority conflex
History
Islamic Law (Sharia)- it is the earliest recorded law in the old
world which pertains to the prohibition of the use of alcohol,
which is usually attributed to passages in the Quran purportedly
dating from the 17th century
1484 Fiat Pope Innocent VIII- Drug Abuse– banned the use of
cannabis in Arabs. Religious intolerance was also the driving
force for drug prohibition in Christian Europe. At the time of the
crusades, the Arabs were using marijuana.
In Northern Europe, the protestants have passed drug laws
motivated by religious prejudice. The 1516 Reinheitsgebot,
which stipulates that beer may only contain water, barley and
hops was a manifestation of Protestant intolerance about
drugs and the catholic church. Not like the commonly
stimulating herbal blends widely used at that time, hops
cause sedation and reduce libido. The exclusive use of hops
had been obligatory in France since 1268
The PDEA Director General and the 2 Deputy Director General must
possess adequate knowledge, training and experience in the field of
dangerous drugs and in any of the following field: law enforcement,
law, medicine, criminology, psychology and social work.
2. Depressant
• contracted pupils
• drunk-like
• difficulty concentrating
• clumsiness
• poor judgement
Warning Signs of Commonly Abused Drugs
3. Stimulants - ex. cocaine, amphetamines
• dilated pupils
• hyperactivity
• euphoria
• irritability
• anxiety
• excessive talking followed by depression or excessive
sleeping
• may go long period of time without eating or sleeping
• weight loss
• dry mouth and nose
Warning Signs of Commonly Abused Drugs
4. Inhalants - ex. glues, aerosols, vapors
• watery eyes
• impaired vision, memory and thought
• secretions from the nose or rashes around the nose and
mouth
• head aches and nausea
• appearance of intoxication
• drowsiness
• poor muscle control
• changes in appetite
• anxiety
• irritability
• lots of cans,aerosols in the trash
• Warning Signs of Commonly Abused Drugs
5 . Hallucinogens - ex. LSD, PCP
• dilated pupils
• bizarre and irrational behavior including paranoia,
aggression, hallucination
• mood swings
• detachment from people
• absorption with self or other objects
• slurred speech
• confusion
• Warning Signs of Commonly Abused Drugs
6. Heroin
• contracted pupils
• no response of pupils to light
• needle marks
• sleeping at unusual time
• sweating
• vomiting
• coughing, shiffling
• Twitching
• loss of appetite
• Warning Signs of Commonly Abused Drugs
• 7. Alcohol
• clumsiness
• difficulty walking
• slurred speech
• sleepiness
• poor judgement
• dilated pupils
• possession of false ID cards
• 8. Tobacco/Nicotine
• smell of tobacco
• stained fingers or teeth
Acute tolerance - The development of tolerance within the course of a single exposure to a
drug.
Adulterant - Material used to increase the mass of a controlled substance. Adulterants produce
physiological effects and give the illusion that more controlled substance is present than its
actual content.
Alkaloid - One of a group of nitrogenous organic bases, especially one of vegetable origin,
having a powerful toxic effect on animals and man, such as nicotine, cocaine, strychnine, or
morphine.
Analgesic - Any drugs, such as salicylates, morphine, or opiates used primarily for the relief of
pain.
Anaphylaxis - An allergic hypersensitivity reaction of the body to a foreign protein or drug.
Antisera - Injecting human serum into various animals, such as the horse, goat,sheep, rabbit,
duck, hen, or guinea pig, can produce antihuman sera.
Antiserum - Any immune serum that contains antibodies active chiefly in destroying a specific
infecting virus or bacterium.
Barbiturate - A derivative of barbituric acid that produces depression of the central nervous
system and consequent sedation.
Cannabis - A genus of tall annual herbs in the family Cannabaccae having erect stems, with 3 to
7 elongated leaflets and pistillate flowers in spikes along the stem. Commonly known as
marijuana or sometimes referred to on the street as grass or pot.
Chronic effect - A pathologic process caused by repeated exposures over a period of long
duration.
Chronic tolerance - The gradual decrease in degree of effect produced at the same blood
concentration in the course of repeated exposure to that drug.
Codeine - A narcotic alkaloid that is used in medicine and cough syrups; highly toxic and habit-
forming narcotic.
Concentration - The amount of a substance in a stated unit of a mixture or solution. Common
methods of stating concentration are percent by weight,percent by volume, or weight per unit
volume. Amount of a drug in a unit volume of biological fluid, expressed as weight/volume.
Crack - Concentrated form of cocaine, which is used in vapor form. It is smoked or inhaled
through crack pipes. It is a highly addictive drug that causes psychotic behavior, which is often
violent. Almost pure form of the drug cocaine hydrochloride, obtained from a shrub native to
Bolivia and Peru. It can cause increased alertness and energy, runny nose, and decreased
appetite when snorted, injected, or smoked.
Depressants - Drugs that depress the action of the central nervous system such as
phenobarbital, pentobarbital, and alcohol.
Designer drugs - Drugs that are produced illicitly by means of chemical technology.They can
cause uncontrollable tremors, chills, or sweating and faintness and paranoia when injected or
taken in pill form.
• Diazepam - (valium) The second benzodiazepine derivative to have been approved for human
usage has been one of the most frequently prescribed drugs in the United States. It is
administered as an antianxiety agent,muscle relaxant, or anticonvulsant.
Drug abuse - The nonmedicinal use of a drug in a manner that is not socially acceptable.
Drug dependence - The primary hazard of the abusive use of drugs is the likelihood for some
individuals to develop a “need” or compulsive desire that may occur as a result of a
psychological or a physical craving.
• Hallucinogens - Drugs like marijuana, LSD, PSP, and ecstasy that produce changes in mood,
thought and perception.
Hashish - Purified resin prepared from the flowering tops of the female cannabis plant and
smoked or chewed as a narcotic or an intoxicant.
• Impramine - The prototype of the tricyclic antidepressant drugs.
• Marijuana - Popular name for the dried flowers and leaves of Cannabis sativa.
Meperidine hydrochloride - A fine, white, odorless, crystalline powder; very soluble in water,
soluble in alcohol, and used in medicine as a narcotic.
Methadone hydrochloride - A synthetic narcotic. Used medicinally as a sedative and also useful
in treating heroin addiction.
Methamphetamine - Colorless, volatile liquid; characteristic strong odor and slightly burning
taste. Highly toxic, flammable, as well as a dangerous fire risk. Basis of a group of hallucinogenic,
habit-forming drugs that affect the central nervous system.
Morphine - White crystalline alkaloid, slightly soluble in water, alcohol, and ether; highly toxic,
narcotic, habit-forming drug.
Mushroom - (Drugs) Umbrella-shaped fungus, some varieties of which contain a drug that can
cause hyperventilation, tremors, and hyperactivity when the fungus is chewed, smoked, or
ground and infused in water and drunk as a tea.
Opiates - Natural, semi-synthetic, or synthetic substances with morphine-like effects in the body.
They are primarily employed as analgesics and can be considered narcotic in their effects.
Opium - A highly toxic plant alkaloid that is a habit-forming narcotic; one source of opium is
morphine.
Pharmacologic - Relating to the study of drugs and their origin, natural properties,and effects on
living organisms.
Phencyclidine (PCP) - Has an anesthetic activity and is manufactured legitimately for use as a
veterinary anesthetic. It has no legitimate use in humans because of its hallucinogenic actions.
The effects on humans
are considered euphoric, but at times depression or anxiety and aggressive behavior are
produced. Common street names are PCP, peace pill,hog, and angel dust.
Picking - Adherence of a drug to the face of the punch used to produce a tablet.Picking creates
holes in the surfaces of pressed tablets, usually near letters such as A or R.
Propoxyphene - A mildly effective narcotic analgesic, somewhat less potent than codeine, that
bears a close structural relationship to methadone.
Qualitative test - A test that determines the presence or absence of specific drugs or
metabolites, proteins, or enzymes in the specimen or sample.
Quinine - Bulky, white, amorphous powder or crystalline alkaloid; very bitter taste; odorless and
levorotatory. Used in medicine as an antimalarial drug.
Stimulants - Drugs that increase the activity of the central nervous system, creating feelings of
confidence and energy. A drug that produces a temporary increase of functional activity or
efficiency. A drug that increases alertness and motor activity and, at the same time, reduces
fatigue, allowing the individual to remain awake for an extended period of time. It can cause
weight loss, increased respiration and heart rate, blurred vision, and anxiety when
snorted,injected, smoked, or swallowed in capsule, tablet, or pill form.
Strychnine - An alkaloid found together with the less active brucine in the seed of Strychnos
nux-vomica, a tree indigenous to India. It is a potent central nervous system stimulant and
convulsant, acting by the selective blockage of postsynaptic neuronal inhibition.
Substance abuse - Use of alcohol or drugs that results in adverse effects on the user. Substance
abuse is a major health and social problem in the United States among adolescents.
Tolerance - A state that develops after long-term exposure to a drug. Metabolic tolerance infers
a faster removal and oxidation by the liver. Functional tolerance infers a change in sensitivity of
the organ to the effects of the drug.
1. The group of drugs that are considered to
be mind altering and gives the general
effect of mood distortion are generally
called
A. Sedatives
B. Hypnotic
C. Hallucinogens
D. Tranquillizers
1. The group of drugs that are considered to
be mind altering and gives the general
effect of mood distortion are generally
called
A. Sedatives
B. Hypnotic
C. Hallucinogens
D. Tranquillizers
2. Drugs like glue, gasoline, kerosene, ether,
paint, thinner, etc. are called:
A. Solvents
B. Deliriants
C. Inhalants
D. All of these
2. Drugs like glue, gasoline, kerosene, ether,
paint, thinner, etc. are called:
A. Solvents
B. Deliriants
C. Inhalants
D. All of these
3. Cocaine is a stimulant drug; LSD is a
A. Hallucinogen
B. Narcotic
C. Solvent
D. Depressant
3. Cocaine is a stimulant drug; LSD is a
A. Hallucinogen
B. Narcotic
C. Solvent
D. Depressant
4. What opium preparation is combined
with camphor to produce a household
remedy for diarrhea and abdominal pain?
A. Tincture of opium
B. Raw opium
C. Paregoric
D. Granulated opium
4. What opium preparation is combined
with camphor to produce a household
remedy for diarrhea and abdominal pain?
A. Tincture of opium
B. Raw opium
C. Paregoric
D. Granulated opium
5. The group of drugs that when
introduced into the system of the
body can produce mental alertness and
wakefulness
A. Stimulants
B. Uppers
C. Speeds
D. All of these
5. The group of drugs that when
introduced into the system of the
body can produce mental alertness and
wakefulness
A. Stimulants
B. Uppers
C. Speeds
D. All of these
6. The hallucinogenic alkaloid from a small
Mexican mushroom used
by Mexican Indians to induce nausea and
muscular relaxation is
called:
A. Psilocybin
B. STP
C. DMT
D. Ibogaine
6. The hallucinogenic alkaloid from a small
Mexican mushroom used
by Mexican Indians to induce nausea and
muscular relaxation is
called:
A. Psilocybin
B. STP
C. DMT
D. Ibogaine
7. What do you call the most powerful
natural stimulant?
A. Erythroxylon coca
B. Heroin
C. Beta Eucaine
D. Cocaine Hydrochloride
7. What do you call the most powerful
natural stimulant?
A. Erythroxylon coca
B. Heroin
C. Beta Eucaine
D. Cocaine Hydrochloride
8. What is the most important constituent
of opium?
A. Morphine
B. Heroin
C. Codeine
D. Cocaine
8. What is the most important constituent
of opium?
A. Morphine
B. Heroin
C. Codeine
D. Cocaine
9. What drug is known as the "assassins of
the youth"?
A. Heroin
B. Cocaine
C. Marijuana
D. Shabu
9. What drug is known as the "assassins of
the youth"?
A. Heroin
B. Cocaine
C. Marijuana
D. Shabu
10. The presence of drug paraphernalia at the
drug scene in the form
of syringe and needle, tourniquet, spoon or
bottle top "cookies"
and tinfoil packet reveals that the drug being
administered are:
A. tablet drugs
B. capsule drugs
C. liquid drugs
D. marijuana leaves
10. The presence of drug paraphernalia at the
drug scene in the form
of syringe and needle, tourniquet, spoon or
bottle top "cookies"
and tinfoil packet reveals that the drug being
administered are:
A. tablet drugs
B. capsule drugs
C. liquid drugs
D. marijuana leaves
11.From among the following, which is correct?
A. Heroin
B. Sodium Carbonate
C. Codeine
D. Cocaine
12.The drug that is obtained from the alkaloid of the
leaves of the
Erythorxylon coca and the other species of
Erthroxlon Linne, or by
synthesis from ecgoine and its derivatives is called:
A. Heroin
B. Sodium Carbonate
C. Codeine
D. Cocaine
13. The presence of the symptom of alcohol
intoxication with out
smell of alcoholic breath is a sign that the
suspected person is
under the influence of:
A. Demerol
B. Sulfates
C. Barbiturates
D. Deliriants
15. Bennies and dexies are for amphetamines;
red devils and double trouble are for ___.
A. Demerol
B. Sulfates
C. Barbiturates
D. Deliriants