The Drug Abuse Warning Network (DAWN) was a public health surveillance system in the United States that monitored drug-related visits to hospital
emergency departments and drug-related deaths.
DAWN was discontinued in 2011,
but its creator, the
Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration
The Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration (SAMHSA; pronounced ) is a branch of the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services. It is charged with improving the quality and availability of treatment and rehabilitative services ...
(SAMHSA), continues to develop other sources of data on drug-related emergency visits.
Organization
Hospitals participating in DAWN are non-federal, short-stay general hospitals that feature a 24-hour emergency department.
Patients are never interviewed. All data are collected through a retrospective review of patient medical records and decedent case files. DAWN collects detailed drug data, including illegal drugs of abuse, prescription and over-the-counter medications, dietary supplements, and non-pharmaceutical inhalants. Because the DAWN cases are defined broadly, DAWN captures many different types of drug-related cases. The whole point of this organization is to find out how many people abuse most drugs. They also seek short-stay hospitals, when a case is drug-related.
History
In 1974, DAWN was designed and developed by the scientific staff of the
DEA's Office of Science and Technology. It was jointly funded with the National Institute of Drug Abuse (NIDA).
DAWN then became a division of the
United States Department of Justice
The United States Department of Justice (DOJ), also known as the Justice Department, is a United States federal executive departments, federal executive department of the United States government tasked with the enforcement of federal law and a ...
before becoming part of NIDA in 1980.
On October 1, 1992, DAWN became part the
Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration
The Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration (SAMHSA; pronounced ) is a branch of the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services. It is charged with improving the quality and availability of treatment and rehabilitative services ...
(SAMHSA), an agency of the
United States Department of Health and Human Services
The United States Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) is a cabinet-level executive branch department of the U.S. federal government created to protect the health of all Americans and providing essential human services. Its motto ...
. SAMHSA has contracted with
Westat, a private research corporation, to manage the New DAWN on the agency's behalf.
Controversy
Information collected by DAWN is widely cited by drug policy officials, who have sometimes confused drug-related episodes –
emergency department visits induced by drugs – with drug mentions. The
Wisconsin
Wisconsin () is a state in the upper Midwestern United States. Wisconsin is the 25th-largest state by total area and the 20th-most populous. It is bordered by Minnesota to the west, Iowa to the southwest, Illinois to the south, Lake M ...
Department of Justice claimed, "In Wisconsin,
marijuana
Cannabis, also known as marijuana among other names, is a psychoactive drug from the cannabis plant. Native to Central or South Asia, the cannabis plant has been used as a drug for both recreational and entheogenic purposes and in variou ...
overdose visits in emergency rooms equal to
heroin or
morphine
Morphine is a strong opiate that is found naturally in opium, a dark brown resin in poppies ('' Papaver somniferum''). It is mainly used as a pain medication, and is also commonly used recreationally, or to make other illicit opioids. Ther ...
, twice as common as Valium." Common Sense for Drug Policy called this as a distortion, noting, "The federal DAWN report itself notes that reports of marijuana do not mean people are going to the hospital for a marijuana
overdose
A drug overdose (overdose or OD) is the ingestion or application of a drug or other substance in quantities much greater than are recommended. , it only means that people going to the hospital mention marijuana as a drug they use". This criticism is also not correct. DAWN has recently clarified their use of the term "drug mention" in methodology because of this erroneous claim. The data is collected by a systematic and confidential review of patients' medical records. Thus, for example, a patient who broke an arm while high on marijuana would not be included in the data. A report released by DAWN in 2002
claims that marijuana overdose alone resulted in documented deaths in Atlanta and Boston, respectively. However, there is no known record or evidence to support the existence of a case of human fatality by result of marijuana overdose.
References
External links
* {{Official website, http://www.samhsa.gov/data/emergency-department-data-dawn
Drug Abuse Warning Network (DAWN), 2010 (ICPSR 34083)
website
Public health in the United States
Drugs in the United States