5-3 Drug Control Laws October 8, 2019

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
ROLE OF DRUGS Lesson Essential Question: How does drug dependency lead to violent crimes?
Advertisements

Drugs : Organization by Pharmacology
Drugs and Toxicology What is a drug? What is a drug? –Any substance capable of producing a physiological response What is a medicine? What is a medicine?
Drug Classes. “The Controlled Substance Act” The government maintains five schedules of classifications for controlled substances Controlled substances.
A Brief History of Drugs An overview of drug policy and use in the United States from the mid-1800s to the present.
© 2006 McGraw-Hill Higher Education. All rights reserved. Chapter 3 Drug Products and Their Regulation.
Drugs and Crime Policy. Drug use and crime ► Psychoactive drugs: alter conscious awareness or perception ► Psychological dependency: person craves a drug.
Forensics/Harrison.  DEA Drug Schedule Site DEA Drug Schedule Site.
Drug Classes bsapp.com. “The Controlled Substance Act” The government maintains five schedules of classifications for controlled substances Controlled.
Lesson: Using Medicines Wisely Welcome 9 th graders from Gainesville High School! By: Kemi Dada, Kathy Lertsuwankul, Ashley Sansaricq, Scotty Pepper,
Pharmacology Chapter 17. Pharmacology  Definition  The effect of drugs on the body and the effect of the body on drugs.
Schedules for Abused Drugs James Keefer Addictions Counseling.
February 12, drug  A drug is a substance that is designed to affect the body either physically or psychologically  Controlled substances  Controlled.
DRUGS Ch. 5.
CH. 24 Illegal Drugs Health Ed.. Drugs Refers to dangerous/ illegal substances Drugs are grouped according to their affects on the body.
Forensic toxicology Part I – Drugs of Abuse.
1 TOPIC 10 SUBSTANCE RELATED DISORDER. Classification of Substance-Related Disorders  Substance Abuse and Dependence  Substance abuse involve a pattern.
Drug Analysis Forensic Science/CSI Foster. How would you figure out which type of drug each of these are?
Chapter 7 - Drugs. Drugs and Crime Drug – natural or synthetic, affects humans psychologically or physiologically Drug – natural or synthetic, affects.
Pastorino/Doyle-Portillo Essentials of What Is Psychology? 1 st edition © 2010 Cengage Learning Chapter 4: Consciousness: Wide Awake, in a Daze, or Dreaming?
Controlled Substances Act. Drugs and Crime A drug is a natural or synthetic substance designed to affect the subject psychologically or physiologically.
MS Procedural Coding Controlled Drugs MHA May 21, 2009 Irene Mueller, EdD, RHIA.
 Enacted into law as part of the Comprehensive Drug Abuse Prevention and Control Act of  Regulation of the manufacture, importation, possession,
Drugs and Toxicology What is a drug? What is a drug? –Any substance capable of producing a physiological response What is a medicine? What is a medicine?
Drug Regulations & Control
Lecture:Forensic Toxicology : Drugs. Narcotic Drugs  Pharmacologically classified as an analgesic  Central Nervous System Depressants  Popular drugs.
Drug Analysis Forensic Science/CSI Foster. How would you figure out which type of drug each of these are?
Using Alcohol and Other Drugs Classifying Drugs. Psychoactive Drugs Chemical substances that serve to alter mood, thought processes and/or behavior. Chemical.
5-1 ©2011, 2008 Pearson Education, Inc. Upper Saddle River, NJ FORENSIC SCIENCE: An Introduction, 2 nd ed. By Richard Saferstein Drug-Control Laws.
Psychoactive Drug Classifications.
Illegal Drugs.
Classification of Drugs bsapp.com. Abuse Inappropriate use Inappropriate use Unwarranted use Unwarranted use Over use Over use May or may not mean addiction.
Chapter 5 Drugs.  Drug – natural or synthetic substance used to produce physiological or psychological effects in humans  More than 75% of the evidence.
Drugs and Toxicology Chapter 9. Drugs A substance (either natural or synthetic) that is used to produce effects (either physiological or psychological)
Forensic Toxicology. Definition The science of detecting and identifying the presence of drugs and poisons in body fluids, tissues and organs.
Unit 3: Drugs Mr. Ross Brown Brooklyn School for Law and Technology.
5-1 ©2011, 2008 Pearson Education, Inc. Upper Saddle River, NJ FORENSIC SCIENCE: An Introduction, 2 nd ed. By Richard Saferstein DRUGS Chapter 5.
Substance Use and Abuse – Lesson 3. Classes of Drugs Depressant: -drugs that make you feel calm or sleepy. People take them to combat insomnia (can’t.
North Carolina vs. United States Drug Schedules.  In NC, drugs are classified by “schedule” according to: ▪ Dangeousness ▪ Risk of Addiction  The charge.
Drug Scheduling ● This chapter will focus on the deadliest to the least addictive drugs ● There will be a test, so study.
DRUG UNIT This unit is meant to give you a better understanding of what drugs are and how they effect your life. REMEMBER………………………….. what you choose to.
Daniel Sifuentes Gabriel Vazquez 5th period
Please make 4-person groups.
DO NOW: While watching this video, write ONE WORD that you think is most important from the video.
Classification of Drugs
Drug-Control Laws The U.S. federal law known as the Controlled Substances Act will serve to illustrate a legal drug-classification system created to prevent.
“Your life can change forever in a matter of seconds”.
Chapter 9 -- Drugs Drug: a substance that is used to produce physiological or psychological effects. Drug abuse – a brief history In the 1960s, the main.
Dependence Categories Identification
History of Drugs and the Legislation made to control them
Drug Classes bsapp.com.
Drug Schedules.
Anabolic Steroids, Laws
Began with the passage of the 1906 Pure Food and Drugs Act
Lesson: Using Medicines Wisely
(Activity – Drug Types Thinking Map)
Toxicology Drugs and Poisons.
Drug Abuse © 2004 Pearson Education, Inc..
(Activity – Drug Types Thinking Map)
Drugs Jan 2018.
Field Sobriety Tests Breath tests
Regulation The legislation that is meant to regulate and control
Drug Schedules Drugs, substances, and certain chemicals used to make drugs are classified into five (5) distinct schedules depending upon: the drug’s.
DEA Schedule of drugs Top 5 Drug Busts.
Collection of Drug Evidence
High-Yield Terms to Learn Abstinence syndrome  A term used to describe the signs and symptoms that occur on withdrawal.
DRUGS and CRIME.
Presentation transcript:

5-3 Drug Control Laws October 8, 2019 Drugs 5-3 Drug Control Laws October 8, 2019 January 20, 2015 Sanders

Drug Control Laws Federal Law dictates five schedules of classification for controlled dangerous substances on a few characteristics of the drug in question. Potential for abuse Medical value Dependence value Physical Psychological October 8, 2019 Drugs

Schedule I High potential for abuse. No current medical use in United States. Examples include Heroin Methaqualone (quaalude) LSD October 8, 2019 Drugs

Schedule II High potential for abuse. A commonly accepted medical use in United States. Examples include Opium, not heroin, an analgesic Cocaine, Cocaine is now predominantly used for nasal surgery Most amphetamines use to treat narcolepsy. October 8, 2019 Drugs

Schedule III Moderate potential for abuse. Commonly accepted medical use in United States. Examples include Barbiturates for the treatment of anxiety and insomnia Anabolic steroids used medically especially to promote tissue growth October 8, 2019 Drugs

Schedule IV Low potential for abuse. Commonly accepted medical use in United States. Examples include Phenobarbital, to control seizures Tranquilizers, to induce sleep October 8, 2019 Drugs

Schedule IV Low potential for abuse. Commonly accepted medical use in United States. These include some opiate drug mixtures that contain non-narcotic medicinal ingredients. October 8, 2019 Drugs