Quote:..can you give examples..? most, if not all, studies I've seen that claim this do not take into account use of other drugs, particularly cannabis or amphetamines..
really a control group who only take psychedelics would be what needs to be tested..
the Nexus is probably one of the few places people like would exist..
Well using the nexus as a control group for such a study doesn't really work out. At least not how you have expressed the conditions. I would assume a majority of the members on here also smoke cannabis and dabble in other drugs especially cannabis. I recall a time when House(the member) on a random day decided to have a 'smokeathon' I forget how many pages of people we had posting that they had smoked a bowl (myself included). It was significant however.
Also many members on here have or do use amphetamines of some kind. Especially MDMA.
The real major blunder I see is this. How many mentally ill people are going to access their computer and come on here. Very few, same goes for schizophreniform illness message boards, forums, and chat-rooms. Even though 1% of the total population has schizophrenia, keep that in mind... We have had members experience psychotic episodes it's probably not as discussed as much as on the forum but I can recall at least 5 in the chat-room. I don't mean a bad trip or whatever I mean hospitilization, drugs, the whole deal. Also, what I had stated in my post (and expandaneum reiterated), how likely is a person who has already been using psychedelics for a number of years to all of a sudden exacerbate a pre-existing condition that was not already set off by other substances? Not likely at all... Likely those people do not have such pre-existing conditions and thus take psychedelics for years.
My point isn't too associate psychedelics with mental illness, I just don't think your statement is really being very fair to the work that has been done there. There are a lot of misconceptions about mental illness. I recall a survey stating that 50% of the general public believed it was the people with mental illnesses fault for having them. That's another thing to take to mind.
Back on topic for example in this paper published about 'LSD psychosis' they review geneology, family history, disease progression, with normal schizophrenia and whaddya know correlation. To turn around and then say "it could have been the cannabis or the amphetamine", I don't think is entirely fair. It would perhaps be more fair to say that they were likely to end up schizophrenic anyways just a matter of what instigated their first episode.
LSD Psychosis or LSD-Induced Schizophrenia?A Multimethod Inquiry
Michael M. Vardy, PhD; Stanley R. Kay, PhD
Arch Gen Psychiatry. 1983;40(
:877-883. doi:10.1001/archpsyc.1983.01790070067008
http://archpsyc.jamanetw...le.aspx?articleid=493118There are dozens of articles like this this one just one of the first I pulled off of the pile. I do not see why a psychedelic could not exacerbate a pre-existing condition. The burden of proof really isn't there.
For example someone's wife can have a child and they can end up, or someone can have a miscarraige, get into a car crash, lose a girlfriend, get hung up on a problem, and end up with a form of chronic psychosis etc. These are all 'triggers' (tons of unlisted ones obviously) that can progress people from prodormal schizophrenia to an episode. Give me one good reason why a heavy psychedelic experience couldn't do the same and maybe I'll listen. Schizophrenics are not even supposed to eat chocolate, ingest caffiene, or drink alcohol because of their biological effects.
Cannabis has been linked to psychosis as well but its unclear whether people who are psychotic smoke it to relieve symptoms or whether it. Unless someone has anything more substantial on that that is all I have heard. I have read decent reports of cannabidiol working as an antipsychotic for acute schizophrenia and bipolar disorders. So the self-medication theory stands in my opinion.
Most people who do obtain a state of psychosis from amphetamine use find it is temporary and not chronic (iirc). Similarly for psychedelics. Unless they were pre-exposed to a schizophreniform disease. Same argument as psychedelics.
I could keep going but I think that's enough to think about for now.