RT Article T1 Marketing a Panic: Media Coverage of Novel Psychoactive Drugs (NPDs) and its Relationship with Legal Changes JF American journal of criminal justice VO 40 IS 3 SP 523 OP 541 A1 Miller, Bryan Lee A2 Stogner, John M. A2 Agnich, Laura E. A2 Sanders, Amber A2 Bacot, Joseph A2 Felix, Shanna LA English YR 2015 UL https://krimdok.uni-tuebingen.de/Record/176420140X AB Recent social and legal responses to novel psychoactive drugs (NPDs) have been attributed to media panics rather than these substance’s actual harms. NPDs, including botanical substances new to Western markets such as Salvia divinorum , newly synthesized analogues such as synthetic cannabinoids and “bath salts,” and new ways of administering drugs, such as combining prescription cough syrup with soda (“purple drank”) have been the target of various forms of legislation at the state and/or federal level. We systematically examine print media coverage of NPDs in the U. S. between 2005 and 2013 to determine whether media attention was temporally associated with legislative change. Results indicate that each drug had a brief window during which it was the focus of sensationalistic reporting. In addition, federal legislation banning synthetic cannabinoids and “bath salts” appear to be closely linked to media reporting as spikes in coverage both preceded and followed the bans. K1 Synthetic drugs K1 Federal drug regulation K1 Media panic K1 Novel psychoactive drugs DO 10.1007/s12103-014-9270-6