This book, as I recall, originated as an information guide for university students. Credibility being an issue, it was written and edited by a combination of medical, psychopharmacological, and psychiatric experts assisted by representative students. The result is a handy encyclopedia covering the psychoactive drugs most prevalent among young people at the time of publication. It was so good that, after reading it, I passed it on to a family nearby with four children, three of them drug-taking teens. It is so good that the youngest teen, no reader in real life, actually read it cover to cover.
In addition to the aforementioned siblings and their friends, I have a number of other young friends including a teenaged niece. Most of them take psychoactive substances, some of them quite regularly. So, too, do many of the adults I know. The difference, to my perception, between the younger and the older users is that the former experiment more. The old folks tend to stick with the tried and true and generally know what they're doing. This is different than how things were when I was a teen insofar as then more adults were experimenting, especially with LSD and other psychedelics.
There is one other important difference between then and now. Back then psychoactive pharmaceuticals were rare. Now they seem to be well nigh universal. You find them in family medicine cabinets. You see them pushed in advertising. The kids, some of whom are on prescribed drugs to begin with, have ready access to such drugs--legal agents taken illegally but with virtual impunity as no one is about to shut down sources like our nearby Searle Corporation.
The ready availability of innumerable psychoactive pharmaceuticals makes possession of current issues of the Physician's Desk Reference vital. Unfortunately, the PDR is not easy to use, is not cheap and is not just about the drugs kids take to get high. Something like Buzzed, updated regularly in cheap editions, would be a great aid.
One of the kids I knew, that I'd known since infancy, had recently been in and out of psychiatric and rehab facilities. His motives for use were mixed. His background had been unstable and much of his personal history unhappy. He had moved a lot, seen a lot of mental health workers of one sort or another, seen a lot of psychiatrists who had prescribed lots of different drugs. They were trying to make him "better" cost-effectively, administering drugs to make him feel better or, within institutions, to make him more manageable so as to make the harried, underpaid staffs feel better. Little real psychotherapy had ever been done, partly because the kid moved so often, partly because psychotherapy is expensive and good psychotherapists rare. Indeed, some drugs do make one feel better. Troubling thoughts can be blotted out. Emotions can be damped down or different ones evoked. Presumably, this was part of his motive. Another part, however, was social. There can be a communal aspect to illicit drug use. It can be a way of making friends quickly, of doing others favors, of achieving recognition. My pal was an expert, experientially speaking, and supplemented this with rather extensive research and reading about psychoactives of all sorts. His researches, however, did not seem to have any strong therapeutic aim. He seemed to be mostly into reading a little about a drug worked and a lot about its subjective effects. Web-sites are devoted to such accounts and he participated in some of them. There had come to be, in other words, an intellectual motive. Obtaining, using and knowing about drugs had become an established hobby for him.
I'm trying in all of this to get at what I perceive to be the major, generally unmentioned, drug problem in the USA: the legal drug industry. My friend got most of his drugs by prescription--either by prescriptions made out to him or to others. Indeed, while he was going to a drug rehabilitation program, a program designed to get him off illegal drugs, he was, he once told me, obtaining legal ones by trading his prescription medications for those of others attending the program. A little Haldol makes you mellow, a lot of Haldol...
My friend died of drug related causes some weeks ago.