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THE COCAINE DANGER

To all who'are familiar with the spread of the cocaine habit in . the United States and elsewhere (writes Professor A. R. Crishny in the Times) the present situation in this country is full of anxiety. It ,is true that cocaine has long b?en employed as a habitual stimulant' in .isolated cases in England, but it now threatens to involve wide circles. . Cocaine is at once a most insidious and the most dangerous of all habitforming drugs. Its use has often been begun in perfect innocence to relieve some local "discomfort in the eyes, nose or throat, and iW victims do not recognise how much they have become dependent on its action on the brain until. an attsmrjt is made to abandon it..when they suffer from an intolerable depression which drives them back to the drug for relief. No surgeon would prescribe chloroform for a patient to inhale at his discretion, and cocaine should be subject to even stricter limitations. If the sale of cocaine to the public is prohibited altogether, we should avoid a danger without inflicting hardship oh anyone except the victims of the habit, and without impairing medical practice.

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Permanent link to this item

https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/HNS19161024.2.49

Bibliographic details

Hawera & Normanby Star, Volume LXXII, 24 October 1916, Page 8

Word Count
194

THE COCAINE DANGER Hawera & Normanby Star, Volume LXXII, 24 October 1916, Page 8

THE COCAINE DANGER Hawera & Normanby Star, Volume LXXII, 24 October 1916, Page 8