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Research into Psychedelics, Shut Down for Decades, is Now Yielding Exciting Results
Refer madness. Long and absorbing article.
Hat tip, Pundit from Another Planet: Research into Psychedelics, Shut Down for Decades, is Now Yielding Exciting Results
The Trip Treatment
Annals of Medicine February 9, 2015 Issue
Research into psychedelics, shut down for decades, is now yielding exciting results.
By Michael Pollan
On an April Monday in 2010, Patrick Mettes, a fifty-four-year-old television news director being treated for a cancer of the bile ducts, read an article on the front page of the Times that would change his death. His diagnosis had come three years earlier, shortly after his wife, Lisa, noticed that the whites of his eyes had turned yellow. By 2010, the cancer had spread to Patricks lungs and he was buckling under the weight of a debilitating chemotherapy regimen and the growing fear that he might not survive. The article, headlined Hallucinogens Have Doctors Tuning in Again, mentioned clinical trials at several universities, including N.Y.U., in which psilocybinthe active ingredient in so-called magic mushroomswas being administered to cancer patients in an effort to relieve their anxiety and existential distress. One of the researchers was quoted as saying that, under the influence of the hallucinogen, individuals transcend their primary identification with their bodies and experience ego-free states . . . and return with a new perspective and profound acceptance. Patrick had never taken a psychedelic drug, but he immediately wanted to volunteer. Lisa was against the idea. I didnt want there to be an easy way out, she recently told me. I wanted him to fight.
Patrick made the call anyway and, after filling out some forms and answering a long list of questions, was accepted into the trial. Since hallucinogens can sometimes bring to the surface latent psychological problems, researchers try to weed out volunteers at high risk by asking questions about drug use and whether there is a family history of schizophrenia or bipolar disorder. After the screening, Mettes was assigned to a therapist named Anthony Bossis, a bearded, bearish psychologist in his mid-fifties, with a specialty in palliative care. Bossis is a co-principal investigator for the N.Y.U. trial.
....
As I chatted with Tony Bossis and {his colleague Stephen Ross, an associate professor of psychiatry at N.Y.U.s medical school} in the treatment room at N.Y.U., their excitement about the results was evident. According to Ross, cancer patients receiving just a single dose of psilocybin experienced immediate and dramatic reductions in anxiety and depression, improvements that were sustained for at least six months. The data are still being analyzed and have not yet been submitted to a journal for peer review, but the researchers expect to publish later this year.
I thought the first ten or twenty people were plantsthat they must be faking it, Ross told me. They were saying things like I understand love is the most powerful force on the planet, or I had an encounter with my cancer, this black cloud of smoke. People who had been palpably scared of deaththey lost their fear. The fact that a drug given once can have such an effect for so long is an unprecedented finding. We have never had anything like it in the psychiatric field.
Research into psychedelics, shut down for decades, is now yielding exciting results.
By Michael Pollan
On an April Monday in 2010, Patrick Mettes, a fifty-four-year-old television news director being treated for a cancer of the bile ducts, read an article on the front page of the Times that would change his death. His diagnosis had come three years earlier, shortly after his wife, Lisa, noticed that the whites of his eyes had turned yellow. By 2010, the cancer had spread to Patricks lungs and he was buckling under the weight of a debilitating chemotherapy regimen and the growing fear that he might not survive. The article, headlined Hallucinogens Have Doctors Tuning in Again, mentioned clinical trials at several universities, including N.Y.U., in which psilocybinthe active ingredient in so-called magic mushroomswas being administered to cancer patients in an effort to relieve their anxiety and existential distress. One of the researchers was quoted as saying that, under the influence of the hallucinogen, individuals transcend their primary identification with their bodies and experience ego-free states . . . and return with a new perspective and profound acceptance. Patrick had never taken a psychedelic drug, but he immediately wanted to volunteer. Lisa was against the idea. I didnt want there to be an easy way out, she recently told me. I wanted him to fight.
Patrick made the call anyway and, after filling out some forms and answering a long list of questions, was accepted into the trial. Since hallucinogens can sometimes bring to the surface latent psychological problems, researchers try to weed out volunteers at high risk by asking questions about drug use and whether there is a family history of schizophrenia or bipolar disorder. After the screening, Mettes was assigned to a therapist named Anthony Bossis, a bearded, bearish psychologist in his mid-fifties, with a specialty in palliative care. Bossis is a co-principal investigator for the N.Y.U. trial.
....
As I chatted with Tony Bossis and {his colleague Stephen Ross, an associate professor of psychiatry at N.Y.U.s medical school} in the treatment room at N.Y.U., their excitement about the results was evident. According to Ross, cancer patients receiving just a single dose of psilocybin experienced immediate and dramatic reductions in anxiety and depression, improvements that were sustained for at least six months. The data are still being analyzed and have not yet been submitted to a journal for peer review, but the researchers expect to publish later this year.
I thought the first ten or twenty people were plantsthat they must be faking it, Ross told me. They were saying things like I understand love is the most powerful force on the planet, or I had an encounter with my cancer, this black cloud of smoke. People who had been palpably scared of deaththey lost their fear. The fact that a drug given once can have such an effect for so long is an unprecedented finding. We have never had anything like it in the psychiatric field.
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Research into Psychedelics, Shut Down for Decades, is Now Yielding Exciting Results (Original Post)
mahatmakanejeeves
Aug 2015
OP
phollins347
(3 posts)1. Good to hear
I am great full for him to be doing better with this rediscovered treatment of emotional distress. If one is in such agony it pays to try something radical.