European Addiction Research
December 18, 2006
Jim Mccambridge, Adam Winstock, Neil Hunt et al.
113 citations
From 1999 to 2003, a survey of people who use drugs in dance contexts found rising lifetime and current use of psilocybin, ketamine, GHB, and nitrates. Current psilocybin use increased sharply in 2002–2003, while ketamine use rose more gradually throughout the period. LSD use declined, mirroring trends in general population surveys. These increases among dance drug users may signal wider prevalence increases among young people, warranting careful study and development of effective interventions.
Journal of Psychopharmacology
November 27, 2013
Adam Winstock, Stephen J. Kaar, Rohan Borschmann
101 citations
Based on a large anonymous online survey of 22,289 people, lifetime use of the potent hallucinogen DMT was 8.9% and past-year use was 5.0%. Among 472 respondents who had recently tried DMT for the first time, the drug produced a strong, intense, short-lived psychedelic high with relatively few negative effects or comedown compared to psilocybin, LSD, and ketamine. DMT had a larger proportion of new users (24%) than the other substances, suggesting its popularity may increase. The authors conclude that DMT has a very desirable effect profile indicating high abuse liability, possibly offset by a low urge to use more.
Scientific Reports
November 3, 2017
Will Lawn, Jaime E. C. Hallak, José Alexandre S. Crippa et al.
78 citations
Ayahuasca users reported greater well-being than both classic psychedelic users and non-psychedelic drug users, and less problematic drinking than classic psychedelic users, though both psychedelic groups reported more problematic drinking than non-psychedelic users. Ayahuasca's acute subjective effects typically lasted six hours, peaking one hour after consumption. These findings come from a large online survey of nearly 97,000 respondents, including 527 ayahuasca users. The authors call for longitudinal studies and randomized trials to further investigate ayahuasca's effects on well-being and alcohol use.
Journal of Psychopharmacology
April 7, 2022
Emma I Kopra, Jason Ferris, Adam Winstock et al.
65 citations
Among 9,233 people who used magic mushrooms in the past year, only 19 (0.2%) sought emergency medical treatment, corresponding to a per-event risk of 0.06%. Younger age was the only factor linked to a higher chance of needing emergency care. The most common symptoms were psychological—anxiety, panic, paranoia, and suspiciousness. Poor mindset, poor setting, and mixing substances were the most frequently cited reasons for the incidents. All but one person returned to normal within 24 hours. The findings confirm that psilocybin mushrooms are relatively safe, with serious adverse reactions being rare and short-lived.
Journal of Psychopharmacology
March 6, 2023
Emma I Kopra, Jason Ferris, Adam Winstock et al.
62 citations
A large international survey of 3364 people who used LSD or psilocybin mushrooms for self-treatment of mental health conditions or life worries found positive changes across all 17 measured outcomes, with the strongest benefits for insight and mood. However, 22.5% of respondents reported negative effects. Higher intensity of the psychedelic experience, seeking advice beforehand, using psilocybin mushrooms, and treating post-traumatic stress disorder were linked to better outcomes. Younger age, high experience intensity, and using LSD were associated with more negative effects. The findings suggest self-treatment outcomes are generally favorable but carry more frequent negative effects than clinical settings.
Journal of Psychopharmacology
October 8, 2020
Rotem Petranker, Thomas Anderson, Larissa J. Maier et al.
57 citations
In a large online survey of 6,753 people who had microdosed psychedelics in the past year, most reported enhanced mood, creativity, focus, and sociability, and the most common challenge was 'None'. Contrary to expectations, having an approach-intention—microdosing to achieve a specific goal—predicted fewer rather than more benefits. Most participants did not test their substances. The perceived benefits greatly outweighed the challenges, but double-blind, placebo-controlled experiments are needed to confirm these self-reported effects.
Journal of Psychopharmacology
June 7, 2022
Emma I Kopra, Jason Ferris, James Rucker et al.
42 citations
Among 10,293 people who used LSD in the past year, 1.0% sought emergency medical treatment, with a per-event risk of 0.2%. Younger age, mental health conditions, and more frequent use increased that risk. Most adverse reactions were psychological—anxiety, panic, confusion—often linked to poor setting or mindset. Symptoms usually resolved within 24 hours, though 11 people had issues lasting beyond 4 weeks. LSD appears relatively safe in recreational settings; adverse effects are typically short-lived and psychological. In clinical contexts, screening, preparation, and supervision should further reduce risks.
March 1, 2020
Adam Winstock, James W. Rucker
29 citations
Psychedelics and hallucinogens, including LSD and psilocybin, act on the 5-HT2a receptor and have a long history of spiritual and counter-cultural use. They are physiologically safe, do not cause dependence, and are being researched for treating anxiety, addictions, and depression. Ketamine, used as an anesthetic and for resistant depression, has abuse potential; while safe in overdose, it poses acute risks from intoxication and chronic use can damage the urinary tract.
Human Psychopharmacology Clinical and Experimental
May 1, 2017
Leigh Coney, Larissa J. Maier, Jason Ferris et al.
18 citations
Most people who use LSD analogues (AL-LAD, 1P-LSD, ETH-LAD) have also tried LSD, and in the UK and US a higher proportion reported using analogues in the past year than LSD alone. Users described the effects as psychedelic, obtained the drugs online, and took them orally. The time to peak effect (2 hours) and duration (8 hours) were similar to LSD, but ratings for pleasurable high, strength, comedown, urge to use more drugs, value for money, and risk of harm were all significantly lower for the analogues compared with LSD. The authors suggest future studies should confirm these findings with chemical testing and dose measurement.
April 12, 2020
Rotem Petranker, Thomas Anderson, Larissa J. Maier et al.
14 citations
preprint
A large survey of 6,753 people who microdosed LSD or psilocybin at least once in the past year found that the most commonly reported benefits were enhanced mood, creativity, focus, and sociability, partially replicating earlier findings. Most participants reported no challenges from microdosing, and the majority did not test their substances for purity. Contrary to expectations, microdosing with the intention of approaching a desired goal predicted fewer rather than more benefits. The authors conclude that the reported benefits outweigh the challenges, but emphasize that double-blind, placebo-controlled experiments are needed to confirm these self-reported effects.
Drug Science Policy and Law
January 1, 2022
Plinio Ferreira, Adam Winstock, Anne Katrin Schlag et al.
9 citations
Nitrous oxide (laughing gas) and alkyl nitrites (poppers) rank among the least harmful recreational drugs when assessed on 16 criteria including dependence, injury, and economic cost. An expert panel using Multi-Criteria Decision Analysis scored nitrous oxide at 6 and poppers at 5 on a 0–100 overall harm scale, placing them just above magic mushrooms (psilocybin). Nitrous oxide scored higher for dependence, environmental damage, mental impairment, and family adversities; poppers scored higher for injury, drug-related damage, economic cost, and mortality. The findings aim to inform UK policy decisions, as nitrous oxide possession is not currently controlled under the Misuse of Drugs Act.
Drug Science Policy and Law
January 1, 2020
Jec Anthony, Adam Winstock, Ja Ferris et al.
9 citations
People with color blindness have reported improvements after using psychedelic drugs like LSD and psilocybin. In the Global Drugs Survey 2017, 47 respondents provided useful descriptions, and 23 reported improved color blindness. Some said the effect lasted from days to years. The improvement may result from new visual experiences (photisms) during the psychedelic state linking with existing color concepts, possibly due to enhanced connections between visual and language brain areas. This preliminary data suggests further investigation is warranted.
Journal of Psychedelic Studies
August 19, 2023
Liam Engel, Monica J. Barratt, Jason Ferris et al.
7 citations
Among 284 people who used mescaline in the past year, 20% had consumed wild-harvested Peyote. Those who preferred Peyote most often cited indigenous cultural traditions (57.8%), availability (40.0%), and environmental sustainability (33.3%) as motivations. San Pedro was the most common mescaline source (56.1%), and those who preferred it cited availability (54.7%), potency (45.3%), and indigenous cultural traditions (44.2%). Price and potency were significantly more important for San Pedro preferrers. Fewer than 7% of San Pedro users had consumed it from native habitats. The findings suggest that promoting cultivated San Pedro could reduce unsustainable wild Peyote consumption.
Journal of psychopharmacology (Oxford, England)
August 1, 2024
Luke Baxter, Cheneal Puljević, Tim Piatkowski et al.
3 citations
Among 3,340 first-time LSD users surveyed internationally, nearly all (97.7%) found the experience exciting, and adverse side effects were rare; only 17 individuals required emergency medical treatment. Although 64.1% reported feelings of fear, these were typically very mild and did not deter most from wanting to use LSD again. The authors conclude that while the recreational LSD experience is generally pleasurable and unwanted effects are uncommon, harm-reduction education remains important to prevent possible risks amid rising illicit use.
Scientific Reports
February 28, 2018
Will Lawn, Jaime E. C. Hallak, J.a.s. Crippa et al.
3 citations
A correction to this article has been published and is linked from the HTML and PDF versions. The error has not been fixed in the paper.
Journal of psychopharmacology (Oxford, England)
June 1, 2026
Gabrielle Smith, Timothy Piatkowski, Jason Ferris et al.
1 citation
People who self-treat psychiatric conditions with unregulated drugs often use ketamine alongside other psychedelics. Among 5831 respondents to the 2020 Global Drug Survey who self-treated diagnosed psychiatric conditions, over 60% had prior psychiatric diagnoses, most commonly depression and anxiety. Those using both ketamine and other psychedelics attended festivals and clubs more often and used ketamine more frequently. Those using only non-ketamine psychedelics showed a significant reduction in ketamine use. Nearly half sought online advice before starting ketamine self-treatment, suggesting online platforms are key for harm reduction resources.
BMJ
February 3, 2026
Adam Winstock, David J Nutt, Caroline Copeland
Reclassifying ketamine without accompanying public health measures would be a symbolic action rather than an effective strategy for reducing harm, according to the authors. They argue that regulatory changes alone are insufficient and must be paired with broader public health interventions to meaningfully address risks associated with ketamine use.
Journal of sex research
January 16, 2026
Mason Levey, Benjamin Bonenti, Timothy Piatkowski et al.
People who reported having used psychedelics to cope with or overcome sexual trauma were significantly less likely to say the drugs improved their sexual communication compared to those who had not used psychedelics for that purpose. No significant difference was found in emotional connection between the two groups. Among those who had used psychedelics for trauma, women were significantly more likely than men to report improvements in both communication and emotional connection. The findings suggest that gender plays a role in how psychedelics affect intimacy, and more research is needed to guide harm reduction and trauma-informed care.