1957
Peyote Effect September 4, 2018 Peer reviewed DOI: 10.1525/california/9780520285422.003.0008
Summary
In the 1950s, research on peyote and mescaline for mental health increased significantly, with notable contributions from Dr. José Rodríguez in Mexico. Salvador Roquet, a young doctor, initially fearful of his psychedelic experience, later recognized the potential of these substances for psychiatry. Over ten years, he collaborated with Mazatec and Huichol shamans to integrate their traditional knowledge into his medical practice in Mexico City, which operated from 1967 to 1974.
Study at a glance
| Population | Salvador Roquet and traditional users of psychedelics from the Mazatec and Huichol communities |
|---|---|
| Key finding | Salvador Roquet came to believe that psychedelics offered profoundly powerful tools for psychiatry. |
Abstract
After several decades in which scientists produced a slow trickle of scholarship on the potential uses of peyote/mescaline for mental health afflictions, in the 1950s this genre of psychiatric research into hallucinogens expanded significantly. Mexico remained a relative backwater for this type of work until 1957, when Dr. José Rodríguez at the Sanatorio Psiquiatrico Santiago Ramírez Moreno in Mexico City initiated a mescaline study, in which a young Mexican doctor named Salvador Roquet participated. Though terrified and initially incapacitated by his experience, over time, Roquet came to believe that the psychedelics he took in this session offered profoundly powerful tools for psychiatry. Over the course of a decade, he sought to learn as much as he could about these drugs from their traditional users, the shamans of the Mazatec and Huichol communities, and to build a medical practice in Mexico City that translated that knowledge into something that would be useful for his urban, ladino, and generally well-educated patients. His Clínica de Psicosíntesis operated in Mexico City from 1967 to 1974.