As the drug abuse epidemic evolves, so do the tools needed to understand and treat it. Accordingly, Epidemiology of Drug Abuse takes the long view, cogently outlining what the book calls "the natural history of drug abuse" and redefining its complex phenomena to reflect our present-day knowledge. Twenty-six eminent contributors discuss the state and future of the field, balancing the practical concerns involved in gathering drug abuse data with the ethics of using the information. - Current thinking on pathways and etiology, as well as medical, psychological, and social sequelae of drug abuse - Proven, up-to-date methodologies for assessment - Challenges of gathering data from high-risk and other user populations - Sampling and applicat...
Policy makers need information to describe and understand a situation involving problematic drug use...
Peer Reviewedhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/40326/2/Galea_The Social Epidemiology o...
This thesis investigated on the use of a large, ever-evolving group of natural and synthetic drugs, ...
The field of drug abuse epidemiology is a relatively new one and recognition of drug abuse as a phen...
This Guide to Drug Abuse Epidemiology is the product of a collaboration between the World Health Org...
The changing face of drug abuse in the United States of America and elsewhere in the world over the ...
In 1998, the National Institute on Drug Abuse (NIDA) published the first edition of Assessing Drug A...
The discipline of epidemiology utilizes the constructs of agent, host, vector, and environment to st...
The mortality and morbidity caused by alcohol, tobacco and illicit drug misuse represents a signific...
Prescription drug abuse has reached an epidemic level in the United States. The prevalence of prescr...
Background: Drug abuse is a major health problem in many countries. Noticing the different patterns ...
In order to explore the most commonly cited correlations between socioeconomic status and drug addic...
Epidemiological studies of drug misusers have until recently relied on two main forms of sampling: p...
Tobacco, alcohol and illicit substance use continue to result in substantial morbidity and mortality...
Latest issue consulted: Jan. 2005Some v. distributed to depository libraries in microficheIssues for...
Policy makers need information to describe and understand a situation involving problematic drug use...
Peer Reviewedhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/40326/2/Galea_The Social Epidemiology o...
This thesis investigated on the use of a large, ever-evolving group of natural and synthetic drugs, ...
The field of drug abuse epidemiology is a relatively new one and recognition of drug abuse as a phen...
This Guide to Drug Abuse Epidemiology is the product of a collaboration between the World Health Org...
The changing face of drug abuse in the United States of America and elsewhere in the world over the ...
In 1998, the National Institute on Drug Abuse (NIDA) published the first edition of Assessing Drug A...
The discipline of epidemiology utilizes the constructs of agent, host, vector, and environment to st...
The mortality and morbidity caused by alcohol, tobacco and illicit drug misuse represents a signific...
Prescription drug abuse has reached an epidemic level in the United States. The prevalence of prescr...
Background: Drug abuse is a major health problem in many countries. Noticing the different patterns ...
In order to explore the most commonly cited correlations between socioeconomic status and drug addic...
Epidemiological studies of drug misusers have until recently relied on two main forms of sampling: p...
Tobacco, alcohol and illicit substance use continue to result in substantial morbidity and mortality...
Latest issue consulted: Jan. 2005Some v. distributed to depository libraries in microficheIssues for...
Policy makers need information to describe and understand a situation involving problematic drug use...
Peer Reviewedhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/40326/2/Galea_The Social Epidemiology o...
This thesis investigated on the use of a large, ever-evolving group of natural and synthetic drugs, ...