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Psychedelics and the media in the Visegrad countries

Orsolya Fehér

Journal of Psychedelic Studies October 5, 2018 Peer reviewed DOI: 10.1556/2054.2018.007 via OpenAlex

Summary

The study highlights how the media shapes public perceptions of psychedelics in the Visegrad Alliance countries, where drug policies vary significantly despite similar historical contexts. It finds that frequent television viewers tend to be less informed and hold more negative views about psychedelics. This stigma contributes to a lag in psychedelic science in these regions compared to wealthier countries. The aim is to encourage a more balanced public discourse regarding the risks associated with psychedelics.

Study at a glance

Design mixed methods
Population four states of the Visegrad Alliance
Key finding Frequent viewers of television demonstrate a lower level of informedness and a more negative attitude toward psychedelics.

Abstract

Background and aims: This paper aims to shed light on the prevailing public narrative regarding psychedelics and the media's role in cultivating it. The study focuses on the four states of the Visegrad Alliance, whose members gained independence from the Soviet Union and later joined the European Union simultaneously. Thus, ominous substances were introduced to their drug markets and wider societies around the same period, yet their current drug policies and international stances on drug related issues differ vastly. The paper argues that although the so-called psychedelic renaissance is rather visible and mediatized in wealthy occidental countries, due to a harsh stigma surrounding psychedelics in the former Eastern Bloc, the state of psychedelic science is lagging behind its potential. Methods: Applying mixed methods of qualitative and quantitative, primary and secondary data collection, the effects of mass media, and the impact of the respective cultural and legal environments of each country are compared and analyzed, using multiple linear regressions, mediation, and moderation analyses. Results and conclusions: As frequent viewers of television demonstrate a lower level of informedness and a more negative attitude toward psychedelics, the findings of this paper are parallel to what is a frequent topic among psychedelic researchers and one that poses important institutional, financial, and reputational challenges on the progress of science. The vision of this study is to foster a public discourse that is more balanced and in which real and relevant risks are addressed.

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