Posted on 11/04/2005 9:57:30 AM PST by laney
BOSTON A study of the effects of peyote on American Indians found no evidence that the hallucinogenic cactus caused brain damage or psychological problems among people who used it frequently in religious ceremonies.
In fact, researchers from Harvard-affiliated McLean Hospital found that members of the Native American Church performed better on some psychological tests than other Navajos who did not regularly use peyote.
A 1994 federal law allows roughly 300,000 members of the Native American Church to use peyote as a religious sacrament. The five-year study set out to find scientific proof for the Navajos belief that the substance, which contains the hallucinogen mescaline, is not hazardous to their health even when used frequently.
The study was conducted among Navajos in the Southwest by McLean psychiatrist John Halpern.
It compared test results for 60 church members who have used peyote at least 100 times against those for 79 Navajos who do not regularly use peyote and 36 tribe members with a history of alcohol abuse but minimal peyote use.
Those who had abused alcohol fared worse on the tests than the church members, according to the study.
Church members believe peyote offers spiritual and physical healing, but the researchers could not say with any certainty that peyotes pharmacological effects were responsible for their test results.
Its hard to know how much of it is the sense of community they get from the religion and how much of it is the actual experience of using the medication itself, said Harrison Pope, the studys senior author and director of the biological psychology laboratory at the hospital.
We find no evidence that a history of peyote use would compromise the psychological or cognitive abilities of these individuals, the researchers wrote in their paper published today in Biological Psychiatry.
I'm against making peyote or magic mushrooms or marijuana illegal (the absurdity of making something that grows naturally comes to mind).
However, I also question the results of any study that sets out to prove a point and then, surprise, reaches the desired conclusion.
These study's proably involve the use of what ever they are studying to come to the end conclusion...
What about whites? Is peyote safe for whites too?
Peyote Pong
Whites as in the drugs or the people?
I thought they were called Peyote Buttons?
lol...i was giving someone a ping to the thread.....but i call it a "pong" and you're right about the buttons :)
LOL..I gotcha!
I can believe this. I did LSD a few times in college back in the '60s, and as soon as I stopped everything went back to norbal.
Yeah, anything that makes you puke uncontrollably can't be bad for you.
Does it? I do not think I ever did a Payote Button...
Oh not sure? I know Indians cannot handle Alcohol because they are not use to it like Caucassion people who introduced them to it..
From what I've heard, if you don't puke after doing payote, you won't get the "full effect". So, I do think it's part of the "process" so to speak.
I'm with you! I'm very surprised at the number of posters on this site who think that monitoring and/or destroying God's own creation is a proper function of the Federal government, in addition to the arrest and punishment of those who make so bold as to defy the government's peremptory prohibitions on consumption of these vegetable products.
I always find this attitude demonstrates an alarming trust of the 'progressive' social-engineering potential of the State, a conditioned mental state I expect among the lefties, but not among self-described conservatives.
;-)
Mushrooms mess up the mind.
The Harvard people are looking for volunteers... ;')
I like a good morel.....
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