Rediscovering psychedelics
C&EN Global Enterprise – March 07, 2022
Source: OpenAlex
Summary
Once demonized, psychedelic compounds are now poised to revolutionize mental healthcare, offering transformative treatments for conditions like major depressive disorder and PTSD. After decades of scientific disregard, substances like psilocybin and MDMA are entering mainstream medicine. Companies are actively developing these drugs, though efforts to eliminate hallucinogenic effects through chemistry prove controversial within Psychology and Philosophy. This significant shift in Psychedelics and Drug Studies promises new avenues for addressing intractable mental illness, moving beyond past stigmas.
Abstract
Over the past decade, psychedelic compounds like psilocybin and ecstasy have emerged as potentially life-changing treatments for mental illnesses, including major depressive disorder and posttraumatic stress disorder. Read on to learn how some companies are trying to bring these once-demonized drugs to market and how others are hoping to use chemistry to eliminate their hallucinogenic effects—a proposition many in the field find controversial. Ancient civilizations revered them as spiritual guides. Counterculture embraced them for their ability to change consciousness. Governments demonized them as psychosis-inducing scourges. Now, after being disregarded for decades as too politically charged for serious scientific study, psychedelic compounds are poised to enter the mainstream of modern medicine as treatments for intractable mental illness. What a long, strange trip it's been. Psychiatrists and companies are hailing psychedelic drugs like psilocybin, LSD, and 3,4-methylenedioxymethamphetamine (MDMA), along with nonpsychedelic mind-altering drugs like ketamine, as the next breakthrough in treating mental