Applying Lessons From Cannabis to the Psychedelic Highway
JAMA Health Forum – June 17, 2022
Source: OpenAlex
Summary
A critical lesson emerges from cannabis policy: expanding access without medical integration risks patient safety. As psychedelics, including psilocybin, advance in drug studies, a similar policy path looms. Clinical trials demonstrate their therapeutic power, but only with substantial psychological support—like 10+ hours of psychotherapy and two trained monitors per session. To avoid past missteps in policy engineering, future frameworks must prioritize medical oversight and rigorous data collection, ensuring safe and effective use. This approach is vital for public health.
Abstract
In 2020, Oregon became the first state in the US to decriminalize use of many illicit substances, including mushrooms containing psilocybin, and allow adults aged 21 years and older to take psilocybin under supervision in state-licensed service centers.Numerous states and municipalities have since proposed similar policies, 1 a process catalyzed by excitement about positive clinical trials of psychedelics for psychiatric conditions 2,3 and the entry of commercial interests into psychedelic drug development.The déjà vu with cannabis policy is remarkable.Over the past 25 years, cannabis liberalization advanced quickly, justified by arguments for compassionate use and personal freedom and frustration toward national drug policies.Indeed, despite federal criminalization, cannabis products are a mainstay in many states, supported by the considerable unmet need for alternative therapies aimed at difficult-to-treat conditions, such as chronic pain; changing public perceptions; and exponential market growth.Similarly criminalized and supported by comparable arguments, psychedelics are poised to follow a parallel pattern, reinforced by the US Food and Drug Administration designating psilocybin and 3,4-methylenedioxymethamphetamine (MDMA) as breakthrough therapies for major depressive disorder and posttraumatic stress disorder, respectively.With this context, we believe that the momentum behind psychedelic decriminalization is unlikely to diminish.Thus, to effectively navigate forward with psychedelics, it would be wise to learn from the lessons of cannabis liberalization.Cannabis liberalization advanced via medical marijuana policies, which designated patients with certain conditions and symptoms as qualifying for medical cannabis licensure.Scientific inquiry around therapeutic uses of cannabis was stifled by federal drug policy, 4 so qualifying conditions were strongly influenced by patient advocacy, rather than comprehensive scientific data.Although physicians recommend medical cannabis for patients with qualifying conditions, physicians typically cannot prescribe treatment regimens.In addition, there are few requirements for follow-up care or rigorous data collection on health outcomes.Furthermore, many physicians hesitate to discuss cannabis with patients because physicians fear legal consequences or feel unprepared to offer guidance, essentially ceding control of cannabis to patients, nonmedically trained dispensary employees, and the cannabis industry.This disconnect enhances the risk of adverse effects, demonstrated by increased cannabis-related emergency department visits 5 and the prevalence of highly concentrated products with dubious medical value, such as dabs.Few states have attempted to moderate these avoidable harms by, for example, standardizing training and dispensing mandates for dispensary employees or guaranteeing appropriate education for physicians. 6Taken together, though medical cannabis policies have effectively expanded cannabis access and industry power, they have done little to integrate cannabis into medical practice, track health outcomes, or promote safe use.Extrapolating the cannabis landscape to psychedelics, we find this lack of integration troubling because oversight of psychedelic administration in clinical trials by experienced monitors, such as therapists, physicians, social workers, and other individuals trained in psychedelic-assisted therapy, likely decreases the probability of severe adverse reactions and enhances treatment success. 7deed, the effects shown in clinical trials were achieved with 10 or more hours of psychotherapy prior to and after administration 2,3 and the presence of 2 trained monitors during dosing sessions