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J. Thomas Ungerleider

4 papers in the library · 207 citations · publishing 1966-1968

Papers

The dangers of LSD. Analysis of seven months' experience in a university hospital's psychiatric service

JAMA August 8, 1966 J. Thomas Ungerleider 61 citations

An analysis of 70 cases of adverse reactions to LSD, taken outside medical or research settings, reveals a wide range of psychiatric side effects, from depressive reactions to full psychotic states. The varied symptoms and patient characteristics underscore the risks associated with non-medical LSD use. Observations from these cases and from community users suggest that widespread use of LSD is a cause for concern.

The "Bad Trip"—The Etiology of the Adverse LSD Reaction

American Journal of Psychiatry May 1, 1968 J. Thomas Ungerleider, Duke D. Fisher, Marielle Fuller et al. 59 citations

Comparing 25 people hospitalized after taking LSD with 25 regular users who had no reported difficulties, the study found no clear historical or clinical features that could reliably predict who would have an adverse reaction. The authors suggest that LSD interacts with personality traits such as schizoid tendencies and unstable reality testing in a complex manner, making accurate prediction of individual responses nearly impossible.

A Statistical Survey of Adverse Reactions to LSD in Los Angeles County

American Journal of Psychiatry September 1, 1968 J. Thomas Ungerleider, Duke D. Fisher, Stephen R. Goldsmith et al. 44 citations

A survey of psychiatrists, psychiatric residents, internists, general practitioners, and psychologists in Los Angeles County counted over 2,000 patients with adverse LSD reactions seen during an 18-month period, which the authors consider a conservative estimate. Despite many clinicians' belief that such reactions were declining, the data show a substantial increase in reported cases from the first six-month period to the third.