Older adults with treatment-resistant depression may benefit from psilocybin therapy but could hold more stigmatized views due to the drug's illicit history and past antidrug messaging. Current clinical communication may inadvertently reinforce negative attitudes. The authors offer communication guidelines for therapeutic psilocybin tailored to older patients.
Psilocybin, a hallucinogen found in certain mushrooms, demonstrated significant therapeutic potential in a study involving 200 participants with treatment-resistant depression. After just three doses, 60% reported substantial symptom relief lasting up to six months. In comparison, traditional antidepressants typically show around 30% effectiveness. The findings suggest that psychedelics like psilocybin could revolutionize psychiatry by addressing the underlying pathogenesis of mental health disorders. This breakthrough highlights the need for more exploration into psychedelics and their implications for clinical psychology and medicine.
In an open-label clinical trial, a single intravenous infusion of ketamine (0.5 mg/kg) was safe and well tolerated in 13 patients with mild cognitive impairment and major depressive disorder. No serious adverse events occurred. Depression severity, measured by the Montgomery-Asberg Depression Rating Scale, dropped from a mean of 27.4 before treatment to 5.7 at 24 hours after the infusion—a large-magnitude improvement. For 8 of the 13 patients, this improvement persisted for up to one month, with a mean score of 12.1 and at least a 50% reduction. These findings suggest ketamine may be effective for depression in this population, but larger randomized controlled trials are needed to confirm efficacy and assess cognitive effects.