| Literature DB >> 22140584 |
Bradley J Partridge1, Stephanie K Bell, Jayne C Lucke, Sarah Yeates, Wayne D Hall.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: The use of prescription drugs to improve cognitive functioning in normal persons--neuroenhancement"--has gained recent attention from bioethicists and neuroscientists. Enthusiasts claim that the practice is widespread and increasing, and has many potential benefits; however recent evidence provides weak support for these claims. In this study we explored how the newsprint media portrays neuroenhancement. AIMS: We conducted an empirical study of media reporting of neuroenhancement to explore: media portrayals of the prevalence of neuroenhancement; the types of evidence used by the media to support claims about its prevalence; and, the possible benefits and risks of neuroenhancement mentioned in these media articles.Entities:
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2011 PMID: 22140584 PMCID: PMC3227668 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0028416
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Media portrayal of the prevalence of neuroenhancement.
| DESCRIPTION OF PREVALENCE | TOTAL |
| Common, widespread or high prevalence & Increasing in prevalence | 54 |
| Common, widespread or high prevalence | 39 |
| Increasing in prevalence | 23 |
| Did not mention prevalence | 18 |
| Low prevalence or uncommon | 6 |
| Prevalence is unknown | 2 |
10 articles also included one “counter view” (6 = low prevalence; 4 = unknown).
Evidence cited by media articles for claims about the prevalence of neuroenhancement.
| EVIDENCE CITED | TOTAL |
|
| 40 (33%) |
|
| 19 (15%) |
|
| 82 (66%) |
|
| 55 (44%) |
| Maher (2008) | 28 (23%) |
| Sahakian & Morein-Zamir (2007) | 7 (6%) |
| Greely et al. (2008) | 6 (5%) |
| Cakic (2009) | 5 (4%) |
| Academy of Medical Sciences (2008) | 5 (4%) |
| British Medical Association (2007) | 3 (2%) |
| White et al. (2006) | 2 (2%) |
| Other papers | 4 (3%) |
|
| 45 (36%) |
|
| 23 (19%) |
| Sahakian | 9 (7%) |
| Cakic | 8 (6%) |
| Other researcher | 6 (5%) |
|
| 9 (7%) |
the total sample minus those articles that did not mention the prevalence of neuroenhancement.
percentages are not cumulative because more than one source of evidence may be cited in each article.
percentages have been rounded to the nearest whole number.
Benefits of using prescription drugs for neuroenhancement mentioned in print media.
| BENEFITS | TOTAL n = 142(%) |
| No benefits mentioned | 7 (5%) |
| Improve brain/mental function | 59 (42%) |
| Improve concentration | 57 (40%) |
| Better exam/academic performance, or better grades | 55 (39%) |
| Improve memory | 44 (31%) |
| Stay awake/reduce fatigue | 43 (30%) |
| Increase alertness | 34 (24%) |
| Help study | 30 (21%) |
| Improve attention | 23 (16%) |
| Efficacy of drugs for CE is uncertain | 22 (15%) |
| Work faster/more productive | 17 (12%) |
| Relieve jet-lag | 17 (12%) |
| Increase intelligence | 13 (9%) |
| Better than caffeine | 10 (7%) |
| Enhance learning | 9 (6%) |
| Increase motivation | 8 (6%) |
percentages are not cumulative because more than one benefit may be cited by each media article.
percentages have been rounded to the nearest whole number.
Risks/side-effects of using prescription drugs for neuroenhancement mentioned in print media.
| RISKS/SIDE EFFECTS | TOTAL n = 142( |
| No risks/side effects mentioned | 60 (42%) |
| Unspecified risks/side effects | 44 (31%) |
| Mental health problems (inc. anxiety and depression) | 27 (19%) |
| Addiction/dependency | 22 (15%) |
| Heart or blood pressure problems | 22 (15%) |
| Insomnia | 20 (14%) |
| Little is known about the risks | 20 (14%) |
| Headache | 19 (13%) |
| Abuse | 17 (12%) |
| Loss of appetite or nausea | 16 (11%) |
| May be fatal | 10 (7%) |
percentages are not cumulative because more than one risk/side-effect may be cited by each media article.
percentages have been rounded to the nearest whole number.