Legal and Ethics Concerns of Psilocybin as Medicine.
The journal of the American Academy of Psychiatry and the Law – December 12, 2024
Source: PubMed
Summary
As psilocybin emerges as a groundbreaking treatment option, healthcare providers face complex challenges balancing patient care with legal requirements. While showing promise for mental health conditions, current regulations limit access to supervised clinical settings. Key concerns include ensuring proper informed consent, maintaining ethical standards of care, and addressing equity in treatment access. Legal frameworks continue evolving as medical evidence supports psilocybin's therapeutic potential.
Abstract
Preliminary research shows the psychedelic psilocybin to be a promising potential treatment for psychiatric illnesses. Recent U.S. government legislation and policy indicate that access to psilocybin, which remains illegal on the federal level despite increasing efforts to decriminalize it at the state and local levels, will be expanded to enable further research into its treatment potential. It remains unclear how psilocybin will be regulated and who will have access to this new treatment, raising important legal and ethics questions psychiatrists must consider. This article reviews the current legal regulation of psilocybin and matters related to standard of care, right to effective treatment, and the respectable minority doctrine. It concludes with a discussion of the ethics matters surrounding the use of psilocybin as medicine, including provider bias, the interpersonal dynamic between providers and patients, informed consent, and equity and access.