Riley Sarah C E, Blackman Graham
Department of Psychology, University of Bath, Bath, UK.
Subst Use Misuse. 2008;43(1):55-71. doi: 10.1080/10826080701772363.
A survey of magic mushroom use was completed by 174 participants in 2004, a year when the sale of hallucinogenic mushrooms was not illegal in the UK. The data were collected in Edinburgh and Bristol (UK). Participants were a self-selecting convenience sample. Participants tended to be in their 20s, White-British, in education or employed; 64% were male. Participants reported a pattern of infrequent but intense consumption (47% used between 4-12 times/year, average consumption in one setting was 12 g, a high dose). Use was explained in terms of laughing, hallucinations, altering perspective (41-74%), and feelings of being closer to nature (49%). Negative experiences reported included paranoia (35%) and anxiety (32%). Mushroom use was located within a wider recreational drug and alcohol culture. Four focus groups aided the interpretation of the data. Future research is recommended into negative experiences. Implications for policy and harm minimisation literature are discussed.
2004年,174名参与者完成了一项关于使用神奇蘑菇的调查,这一年在英国,致幻蘑菇的销售并不违法。数据收集于英国爱丁堡和布里斯托尔。参与者是一个自我选择的便利样本。参与者多为20多岁的英国白人,处于受教育阶段或有工作;64%为男性。参与者报告了一种不频繁但强烈的消费模式(47%的人每年使用4至12次,一次使用的平均量为12克,属于高剂量)。使用神奇蘑菇的原因包括发笑、幻觉、改变认知(41%-74%)以及感觉更亲近自然(49%)。报告的负面体验包括妄想(35%)和焦虑(32%)。使用神奇蘑菇的行为存在于更广泛的娱乐性毒品和酒精文化背景中。四个焦点小组协助对数据进行了解释。建议未来针对负面体验展开研究。文中还讨论了对政策及危害最小化文献的影响。