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It was the most peaceful, joyous, incredible, life changing experience I've ever had in
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my life. There were scary parts, foreboding parts … I always knew there was beautiful
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and joy and peace on the other side of it. It was freeing, it was really freeing.
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This is Alana. She's describing what she felt after she took a dose of this stuff — psilocybin.
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It's a naturally occurring psychedelic compound, the kind you find in magic mushrooms.
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But she wasn't tripping in a dorm room or at Woodstock — it actually wasn't recreational
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at all. If anything became unreal or I was feeling
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nervous or not in touch with reality, I would squeeze his hand and he would squeeze mine
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back just to reassure me that I was okay and everything was alright.
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It was part of a controlled medical test to see if psychedelics could be useful in helping
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people quit cigarettes. Alana had been smoking for 37 years before her session with psilocybin,
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and she hasn't had a cigarette since.
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Research on psychedelics for medical use is preliminary. Most studies suffer from really small
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sample sizes. That's partly because the federal government lists LSD and psilocybin
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as Schedule 1 drugs. So researchers face extra red tape, and funding is really hard to come by.
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Vox writer German Lopez reviewed dozens of studies that have been done. He found that
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psychedelics show promise for treating addiction, OCD, anxiety, and in some cases, depression.
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One small study of 15 smokers found that 80 percent were able to abstain from smoking
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for six months after a psilocybin treatment. In a pilot study of 12 advanced cancer patients
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suffering from end-of-life anxiety, participants who took psilocybin generally showed lower
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scores on a test of depression. And smaller study suggested psilocybin treatment
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could also help people with alcohol dependence cut back on their drinking days.
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We don't have all the answers as to what exactly these treatments are doing in the
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brain. But they seem to work by providing a meaningful, even mystical experience that
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leads to lasting changes in a patient's life.
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The issues that I talked about, or thought about, or went into during my experience
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were transformative in the sense that I got to look at them through a different lens.
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I know this sounds weird, I feel like I have
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more connections in my brain that I couldn't access before
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That feeling that Alana is describing is actually pretty spot-on.
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When you take LSD
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your brain looks something like this.
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You can actually see a higher degree of connectivity between various parts of the brain, it's
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not limited to the visual cortex.
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This communication inside the brain helps explain visual hallucinations
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— and the researchers argue that it could also explain why psychedelics can help people
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overcome serious mental issues. They wrote that you can think of psychiatric
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disorders as the brain being “entrenched in pathology.” Harmful patterns become automated
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and hard to change, and that's what can make things like anxiety, addiction and depression
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very hard to treat.
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00:03:04,880 --> 00:03:06,240 That's Albert Garcia-Romeu, he's a Johns
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Hopkins researcher who worked on studies of of psilocybin and smoking addiction, like the
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one that Alana's involved with.
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He says that when participants take psychedelics,
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One of the big remaining questions here is how long these benefits actually last after just
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the one-time treatment. A review of research on LSD-assisted psychotherapy
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and alcoholism found no statistically significant benefits after 12 months.
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And a recent study on psilocybin and depression found that benefits significantly dropped
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off after three months.
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And of course are some big risks to using psychedelic drugs.
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It's hard to predict a patient's reaction and some might actually endanger themselves.
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Those predisposed to psychotic conditions are especially at risk for having a traumatic
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experience while on the drug. It's difficult to draw solid conclusions
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from the existing studies. But there's more than enough promise here
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to merit further research and further funding for that research.
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As Matthew Johnson of Johns Hopkins said, "These are among the most debilitating and
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costly disorders known to humankind.” For some people, no existing treatments help.
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But psychedelics might.
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One thing you might still be wondering is why so much of this research is so new, when we've known
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when we've known about psychedelics for thousands of years.
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Well since these drugs are so old, they can't be patented, which means that pharmaceutical companies
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don't really have any incentive to fund any research into them.
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So that really leaves it up to governments and private contributors to fund all these studies.
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And there actually was a lot of research done into these drugs in the 50s and 60s, but there was a big enough
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backlash to the abuse of psychedelics in that period, especially around events like Woodstock,
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that funding really dried up, and research stopped.
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And that's why it's only now that we see this research happening, with private, not government contributions.