Ayahuasca in adolescence: Qaualitative results.

Journal of psychoactive drugs  – June 01, 2005

Source: PubMed

Summary

Adolescents in legal, religious ayahuasca ceremonies appear as healthy and well-adjusted as non-using peers. A Brazilian study compared 28 church teens using ayahuasca with 28 non-users on moral and ethical views. Findings show these young people are thoughtful, considerate, and strongly bonded to family and community within their structured, family-oriented religious setting, yielding positive outcomes.

Abstract

Qualitative research was conducted in Brazil among 28 ayahuasca-consuming adolescents members of the União do Vegetal Church, and 28 adolescents who never used ayahuasca. They were compared on a number of qualitative variables, including vignettes measuring moral and ethical concerns. Psychocultural studies utilizing co-occurences of variables in the realm of qualitative studies are useful in understanding and complementing quantitative studies also conducted among this population. Qualitative data show that the teens in the União do Vegetal religion appear to be healthy, thoughtful, considerate and bonded to their families and religious peers. This study examines the modern use of a powerful hallucinogenic compound within a legal religious context, and the youth who participated in these ayahuasca religious ceremonies (usually with parents and other family members) appeared not to differ from their nonayahuasca-using peers. This study helps to elucidate the full range of effects of plant hallucinogenic use within a socially-sanctioned, elder-facilitated and structured religious context.

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