The most authoritative study yet was published this week by a team from Johns Hopkins School of Medicine, according to GOOD:
A team from the Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine recently published results from a roughly year-long experiment.
The researchers worked with 18 volunteers who were given pure
psilocybin to measure how it affected people and how different dosages
changed the experience. The subjects were screened for psychological
health and given the drug in a pleasant environment, after preparatory
guidance. They even had a soundtrack consisting of "classical and world
music chosen to complement the arc of the psilocybin action, from onset,
through the peak of the effects, and subsiding back to baseline."
The results? At high dosages people
occasionally experienced fear, anxiety, or delusions. But the negative
effects of those "bad trips" were easily mitigated by the reassuring
researchers and didn't outlast the session. At more moderate doses, the
results were almost unambiguously positive. Moreover, people didn't just
appreciate the experience as fun; they found it spiritually meaningful,
with lasting benefits.
Reading the volunteers' first-hand reports
of how the experiences affected them is a testament to their value.
"More and more, sensuality and compassion and gratitude continue to
unfold around me." "I try to judge less and forgive more." "I feel that I
relate better in my marriage. There is more empathy." "I need less food
to make me full. My alcohol use has diminished dramatically."
Should we all rush out to buy shrooms? No, first because they're
schedule 1 controlled substances on par with heroin. Second because most
people can't recreate the safe psilocybin and environment used in the
experiment.As GOOD's Andrew Price points out, however, psychiatrists and authorities need to take a closer look.
No comments:
Post a Comment