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Brooke J. Arterberry

University of Michigan–Ann Arbor

1 paper in the library · 20 citations · publishing 2022

Papers

Race, Ethnic, and Sex Differences in Prevalence of and Trends in Hallucinogen Consumption Among Lifetime Users in the United States Between 2015 and 2019

Frontiers in Epidemiology March 23, 2022 Alan K. Davis, Brooke J. Arterberry, Yitong Xin et al. 20 citations

Asian females had the highest prevalence of past-year hallucinogen use (35.06%), two or more times that of White males and females and Native American males. More than half of White males and females, Multiracial males, and Hispanic males had ever used psilocybin or LSD, while less than a quarter of Black males and females reported lifetime psilocybin use. Native American males had the lowest lifetime MDMA use (17.62–33.30%) but the highest lifetime peyote use (40.37–53.24%). Pacific Islander males had the highest lifetime mescaline use (28.27%), and Pacific Islander males and females had the highest lifetime DMT use (15.68–38.58%).