Benzodiazepines are rarely used as "party" or "good time" drugs. Recent studies of
drug abuse liability have found that
benzodiazepines are minor euphoriants: they are neither sought nor valued on the same level as
cocaine,
methaqualone, or even alcohol. Although they do have mild to moderate euphoriant effects in
recreational drug users, detoxified chronic alcoholics and, at very high dosages, detoxified
sedative "addicts", only a small proportion of patients entering
drug abuse treatment programs cite
benzodiazepine use as their primary
drug problem. However, it is difficult to estimate the extent to which
benzodiazepines are primary drugs of abuse, i.e. the extent of their ability to induce euphoria with psychic dependence and active drug-seeking behavior. This may be due in part to inconsistent or ambiguous reporting terminology and reliance on laboratory studies without comparisons with actual street use. In addition, it is unclear if patients admitted to emergency rooms for non-medical use of
benzodiazepines are typical of all patients who abuse these drugs. This article will examine the current data available on
benzodiazepine abuse and will assess the extent to which
benzodiazepines are used as primary drugs of abuse.