Prevalence of reported peyote use 1985-2010 effects of the American Indian Religious Freedom Act of 1994.
The American journal on addictions January 1, 2014 Peer reviewed DOI: 10.1111/j.1521-0391.2013.12083.x via PubMed
Summary
Peyote use among American Indians rose dramatically in the four years after the 1994 amendment to the American Indian Religious Freedom Act, stabilizing at just under 10%, while use in the rest of the US population remained between 1% and 2%. Analysis of 886,088 surveys (12,749 from American Indians) from 1985 to 2010 suggests that social desirability bias suppressed pre-amendment reporting due to peyote's illegal status. The rapid increase exceeded what could be explained by growth in the Native American Church or available peyote supplies, indicating under-reporting of illicit drug use.
Study at a glance
| Design | analysis of existing archived nationally representative surveys |
|---|---|
| Sample size | 886,088 |
| Population | American population, including American Indians |
| Key finding | Peyote use among American Indians rose to nearly 10% after the 1994 amendment to the American Indian Religious Freedom Act, while use in the general population stayed between 1% and 2%. |
Abstract
Peyote was classified as a hallucinogen in the Drug Abuse Control Act of 1965, leaving American Indian (AI) religious use in legal ambiguity. In 1994, the American Indian Religious Freedom Act was amended to unambiguously protect the right of religious use of peyote for AIs. The purpose of this article is to report the prevalence rates of peyote use by AIs compared to the rest of the US population and to determine what effect the act's passage had on peyote use rates. This investigation utilized an analysis of existing archived large nationally representative surveys of the American population. Data on peyote use rates was determined for most years 1985 through 2010. A total of 886,088 completed surveys were analyzed, of which 12,749 were from AIs. Use rates were triangulated using peyote harvest data. Peyote use for AIs and the rest of the US population has remained stable between 1% and 2%. American Indian use rose dramatically in the 4 years following the AIRFA and leveled to just under 10%. The rapidity of the rise was excessive in light of the growth in the NAC and compared to the amounts of peyote stocks available. It is hypothesized that social desirability biases suppressed the Pre-AIRFA use rates due to peyote illegal status. Beyond describing peyote use rates and the effects of the AIRFA, this research adds to the body of evidence regarding the levels of under-reporting of illicit drugs.