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Health & Wellness News

Psychedelic therapies, popular for thousands of years, could be the future of psychiatric treatment

Ann Arbor Decriminalized Magic Mushrooms
FILE - in this Aug. 3, 2007, file photo magic mushrooms are seen in a grow room at the Procare farm in Hazerswoude, central Netherlands. Magic mushrooms and other psychedelic plants and fungi are now effectively decriminalized in Ann Arbor, Mich., at least in terms of city police enforcement priority. City Council voted unanimously Monday night, Sept. 21, 2020 in favor of a resolution declaring it's the city's lowest law enforcement priority to investigate and arrest anyone for planting, cultivating, purchasing, transporting, distributing, engaging in practices with or possessing entheogenic plants or plant compounds. (AP Photo/Peter Dejong, File)

HARRISBURG, Pa. - Researchers around the world and in the commonwealth are looking into the therapeutic uses of psychedelic drugs. The use of certain substances are deeply rooted in Latin America’s Pre-Columbian societies and could be part of the future of psychiatric treatment.  

Naturally occurring chemicals found in cacti, mushrooms and toads in Latin America have been used for millennia in conjunction with spiritual guidance. 

Now, therapists around the world and in the commonwealth are looking to these drugs as ways to treat the most severe cases of mental health trauma and addiction. 

Hannah McLane, founder and director of the SoundMind Center in Philadelphia, says mind-altering drugs paired with informed therapy can be profoundly beneficial for patients.

“The medicines that we're talking about are always with therapies, it's that we're not talking about here, any medicines that you just give a pill and walk away to give a pill and you talk to the person,” McLane said.  

Victor Alfonso Cabral, a psychotherapist with Harvest Three Gathering Counseling Center in Harrisburg, said some cultural hurdles will need to be overcome to normalize such treatments.

“These medicines have been in our cultures for thousands of years, right? And so, through colonization, a lot of our religious beliefs, a lot of our spiritual practices, a lot of the medicines that we use, have been kind of demonized,” Cabral said. 

Psychedelic therapy is being used with patients who have what is known as “treatment resistant PTSD,” such as survivors of sexual abuse or combat veterans. 

A 2020 Johns Hopkins trial showed psilocybin mushrooms can be four times more effective than pharmaceutical antidepressants. 

Mushrooms are also being tested in Oregon for addiction treatment.

But, McLane noted legal limits on psychedelic treatment and cultural stigmas are some of the biggest hurdles to wider acceptance and use.

The federal government is also limiting therapeutic uses of the drugs — many of which are still in trials.

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