Sponsored Links
-->

Friday, August 10, 2018

Spring Dance features a world premiere from Dean of Dance Susan ...
src: www.uncsa.edu

Jerome H. Jaffe was the Drug Czar under the administration of President of the United States Richard Nixon.


Video Jerome Jaffe



Career

Many American soldiers used heroin during the Vietnam War. According to Representative Robert Steele in a report for the House Foreign Affairs Committee, there was little use in the Army until late 1969. But by 1971, 10 to 15 percent of the troops in Vietnam were using heroin from the Golden Triangle. It was about this time that based on the efforts of Jaffe, methadone clinics were established in the U.S., partly to treat addicted veterans.

Under the administration of President Nixon, Jerome Jaffe was the chief of the Special Action Office for Drug Abuse Prevention (SAODAP), an executive agency created by President Nixon, a member of the Republican Party of the United States. During his career, he popularized the use of methadone treatments for heroin addicts, stating that "There was evidence that methadone treatment was effective. There were some good controlled studies." He also initiated "methadone programs, detoxification programs, and therapeutic communities." Jaffe was a powerful opponent of Ibogaine trials to treat drug dependancy, concentrating instead on lifelong replacement therapies with alternative opiates like methadone and buprenorphine.

Currently, Jaffe is a clinical professor in the Department of Psychiatry at the University of Maryland School of Medicine in Baltimore, where he works in the Division of Alcohol and Drug Abuse. He lives in Maryland and has three grandchildren.


Maps Jerome Jaffe



References


DISCOGRAPHY/SHOP â€
src: static1.squarespace.com


External links

  • Epstein, Edward Jay. "The Krogh File - the Politics of 'Law and Order'." National Affairs, no. 39 (1975): 99-124.


Source of article : Wikipedia