Tuesday, May 21st, 2013

It’s High Time to Destigmatize Psychedelics

Published on August 22, 2012 by   ·   No Comments

Jonathan D. Moreno, Ph.D/Psychology Today

Marijuana for medical purposes has finally become a serious policy option. Meanwhile, there has been a quiet but promising revival of research on the potential of psychedelics as part of the treatment of mental illness.

It is exactly 50 years since Congress passed the Food and Drug Act that gave expanded powers to the FDA. In general the new rules were warranted, requiring that drugs being marketed meet both efficacy and safety criteria. But psychedelics like LSD were still experimental. Many psychiatrists in the U.S. and abroad had been working with them for years in the hopes that they could provide both a laboratory model of psychotic states (called “psychotomimetics”), and a therapy for disorders that were and today remain recalcitrant to standard therapies.

Soon after the new law was in place the FDA decided to curtail research on LSD, with one ironic exception: Intelligence agencies and the military were still able to do research through a special exemption. But by the mid-1960s even those agencies had largely lost interest in LSD, after more than a decade of often shockingly irresponsible “experiments,” so even that work was essentially frozen. In spite of a congressional probe spearheaded by Senator Robert F. Kennedy (whose wife Ethel seems to have been one of many elites who had undergone LSD therapy, joining a list that included actor Cary Grant and publisher Henry Luce), the regulators held their ground. By 1970 LSD was classified as a schedule 1 drug that had no medical value.

Part of the problem was that psychedelics had become associated with the public antics of Timothy Leary, who had been summarily dismissed from Harvard. Though Leary’s activities were a setback for psychedelics, his reputation is overdue for reassessment. Leary was admittedly a notorious publicity hound but he nonetheless truly believed that LSD could save humankind. And in comparison to many of his contemporaries Leary had a sense of medical ethics. For example, in his psilocybin experiments with prisoners at Concord Prison in Massachusetts (the goal was to assist in their rehabilitation), he reportedly obtained consent and gave clear risk and benefit information to volunteers. That was not common practice in medical experiments at the time and contrasted with the random dosing that CIA operatives were doing to citizens around the country. And Leary was far more careful than many others in his management of LSD experiences, emphasizing the both the internal “set” of the participant and the “setting” or external environment.

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