Johns Hopkins University

Mushrooms, for article on psilocybin public opinion

Nearly 9 in 10 Americans now think using psilocybin is ‘morally positive,’ in dramatic shift in public opinion

Supervised psilocybin therapy just got a remarkable vote of confidence: in a new peer-reviewed survey of 795 U.S. adults, 91% of liberals and 86% of conservatives called its use for psychiatric treatment morally acceptable. That’s the kind of bipartisan agreement you almost never see anymore. Researchers from Oxford, Yale, Johns Hopkins, and Granada also found that strong majorities approved of psilocybin to enhance well-being in healthy people, not just to treat illness. The authors suggest compassion-based values help explain the consensus across political lines. As more states move toward legal, supervised psilocybin services, this quiet agreement among Americans hints at a broader, more humane shift in how societies might soon approach mental health.