DuPontR.L., “Addiction, Anxiety and Benzodiazepines—A Public Policy Perspective,” in WilfordB.B., ed., Balancing the Response to Prescription Drug Abuse: Report of a National Symposium on Medicine & Public Policy (Chicago: American Medical Association, 1990): 87–94.
2.
National Institute on Drug Abuse, National Household Survey on Drug Abuse: Population Estimates 1990 (Rockville: National Institute on Drug Abuse, 1991).
3.
See Missouri Task Force on Prescription Drug Abuse, Misuse and Diversion, Scam of the Month II (Jefferson City: Missouri Dept. of Mental Health, 1989).
4.
SmithD.E.SeymourR., “Prescribing Practices: The Educational Alternative for the Misprescriber,”Proceedings of the White House Conference on Prescription Drug Abuse (Washington, D.C.: U.S. Government Printing Office, 1980): 31–38.
5.
RussoR.J., “Foreword,” in GreenfieldD.P., ed., Prescription Drug Abuse and Dependence: How Prescription Drug Abuse Contributes to the Drug Abuse Epidemic (Springfield: Charles C. Thomas, 1995): At ii.
6.
GellerA., “Common Addictions,”Clinical Symposia, 48 (1996): 19–25; National Institute on Drug Abuse, supra note 2; and HarrisL., Problems of Drug Dependence 1990: Proceeding of the 52nd Annual Scientific Meeting of the Committee on Problems of Drug Dependence (Rockville: National Institute on Drug Abuse, 1991).
7.
JaffeJ.H., “Drug Addiction and Drug Abuse,” in GilmanA.G., eds., The Pharmacological Basis of Therapeutics (New York: Macmillan, 6th ed., 1980): 982–1004.