Treatment of Cocaine Abuse: An Annotated Bibliography
By (Author) John J. Miletich
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Greenwood Press
19th March 1992
United States
Tertiary Education
Non Fiction
Pharmacology
Bibliographies, catalogues
016.61686
Hardback
256
Cocaine has been a socio-medical problem for centuries. In the United States, the first cocaine epidemic occurred between 1880 and the 1920s. In the 1960s shortages of heroin as well as government programs to stop the smuggling of marijuana may have stimulated the use of cocaine as a substitute. With the development of crack, cocaine became available at a price that make it accessible to virtually anyone. Today, the long-term effects of crack are just beginning to be felt, especially among children born of users. Treatment of cocaine abuse has traditionally been non-pharmacological, although beginning with the 1980s, various drugs have been used to decrease cocaine craving. This bibliography contains more than 600 references, spanning a century of research and writing. Source publications, all of which are annotated, include books, articles, conference proceedings, dissertations and government publications. The material is organized within four subject-oriented chapters and alphabetically within each chapter. Author and subject indexes provide additional access. In addition, Miletich includes appendixes on common names for cocaine, videocassettes about the drug and a timeline. The work will be of value to researchers as well as social workers, psychologists and others working in the substance abuse field.
A comprehensive bibliography of interest to undergraduate and graduate students as well as to health and medical professionals. Covering the particularly timely topic of cocaine, it includes more than 600 entries with informative annotations. The preponderance of the citations are to journal articles, but also included are book chapters, dissertations, government publications, conference proceedings, and books. Miletich's work is not so voluminous as Cocaine: An Annotated Bibliography, ed. by Carlton E. Turner and others (CH, Jul'89); and it is different in its four-chapter format and its inclusion of entries after 1987. And much has been written about cocaine in the late 1980s and early 1990s. The chapters are titled "Women and Children," "Specific Occupations," "Treatment," and "Definition, Identification, Diagnosis." It is impressive in including more than 40 entries for a hot topic such as "Crack Babies." An appendix listing current videos is useful for ordering up-to-date media for academic collections. The bibliography is detailed and well organized and an asset to undergraduate library collections.-Choice
This is a good bibliography with strong coverage of literature drawn from a variety of health care and popular sources.-ARBA 93
"This is a good bibliography with strong coverage of literature drawn from a variety of health care and popular sources."-ARBA 93
"A comprehensive bibliography of interest to undergraduate and graduate students as well as to health and medical professionals. Covering the particularly timely topic of cocaine, it includes more than 600 entries with informative annotations. The preponderance of the citations are to journal articles, but also included are book chapters, dissertations, government publications, conference proceedings, and books. Miletich's work is not so voluminous as Cocaine: An Annotated Bibliography, ed. by Carlton E. Turner and others (CH, Jul'89); and it is different in its four-chapter format and its inclusion of entries after 1987. And much has been written about cocaine in the late 1980s and early 1990s. The chapters are titled "Women and Children," "Specific Occupations," "Treatment," and "Definition, Identification, Diagnosis." It is impressive in including more than 40 entries for a hot topic such as "Crack Babies." An appendix listing current videos is useful for ordering up-to-date media for academic collections. The bibliography is detailed and well organized and an asset to undergraduate library collections."-Choice
JOHN J. MILETICH is Reference Librarian at the University of Alberta, Canada. Among his numerous earlier works is Work and Alcohol Abuse: An Annotated Bibliography and States of Awareness: An Annotated Bibliography (Greenwood Press, 1987 and 1988, respectively).