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  1. Jan 1, 2000 · Abstract. The past 100 years witnessed the formation of a disease concept of alcoholism and a rapid increase in the knowledge of its aetiopathology and treatment options. In the first half of the century, public sanctions aimed at the abolition of alcoholism.

    • Karl Mann, Derik Hermann, Andreas Heinz
    • 2000
  2. By the start of Prohibition in 1920, tens of millions of gallons of denatured ethyl alcohol were made for industrial use and considered legally exempt by the U.S. government because it contained toxic additives rendering it dangerous to drink.

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    • alcohol history prohibition and drug treatment2
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  4. American narcotic policy has been highly variable, having passed through at least four major stages during the past 100 years. In the nineteenth and early twentieth centuries, government involvement was minimal. Drug use was largely a private matter, as was drug treatment.

    • Dean R. Gerstein, Henrick J. Harwood
    • 1992
    • 1992
  5. Jan 1, 2014 · Our objective was to evaluate animal models and the neuroscientific conceptualization of addiction in light of alcohol or drug dependence and treatment in patients struggling with an...

  6. The history of the treatment of alcohol and other drug problems is often assumed to be a straightforward story of progress — moralism, neglect, and brutality were displaced by scientific knowledge, medical activism, and professional civility; a view that the addict exercised free will in choosing to use drugs was succeeded by an understanding of...

  7. Aug 7, 2023 · On January 29, 1919, Congress ratified the 18th Amendment, which prohibited the manufacturing, transportation, and sale of alcohol in the United States. Later that year the National Prohibition Act, known as the Volstead Act, was passed to provide the government with the necessary support and funds to enforce Prohibition.

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