AI Article Synopsis

  • Psilocybin use is associated with a reduced likelihood of crime-related outcomes, as shown in various observational studies, but variations across different racial and ethnic groups have not been previously explored.
  • A study utilizing a large national sample found that psilocybin use lowers the odds of crime arrests across different racial and ethnic groups, but this effect was less pronounced in Black and Hispanic individuals.
  • The research suggests a need for further studies that consider the intersection of race, ethnicity, and the impact of systemic factors, including mental health and social inequalities, on the relationship between psilocybin use and crime.

Article Abstract

Introduction: Psilocybin use has been linked to lowered odds of crime-related outcomes across a host of observational studies. No studies have investigated how these associations may differ among those of different races and ethnicities.

Methods: Using a nationally-representative sample of 734,061 adults from the National Survey on Drug Use and Health (2002-2020), we investigated whether race and ethnicity moderate the associations between lifetime psilocybin use and four measures of crime arrests (property crime, assault, serious violence, and miscellaneous crimes).

Results: First, we replicated prior findings and demonstrated that psilocybin confers lowered odds of crime arrests for all four outcomes in question. Second, we demonstrated that race and ethnicity moderate the associations between lifetime psilocybin use and crime arrests for three of our four outcomes. Third, we examined the associations between psilocybin and crime arrests across different races and ethnicities (White, Black, Indigenous, Asian, Multiracial, and Hispanic participants). Psilocybin conferred lowered odds of at least one crime arrest outcome for all racial and ethnic groups except for Black and Hispanic participants.

Discussion: Future investigations should take an intersectional approach to studying the interrelationship of sociodemographic factors, psychedelic use, and crime, examine the structural factors (i.e., systemic racism) that may underlie these results, and investigate whether psychedelics can alleviate mental health disorders that contribute to cycles of recriminalization for communities of color.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10484513PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fpsyt.2023.1169692DOI Listing

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