Waterloo Region Record

First patient in Quebec gets approval for magic-mushroom therapy

Health Canada allows treatment but still not covered by provincial health insurance

- VIRGINIE ANN THIS STORY WAS PRODUCED WITH THE FINANCIAL ASSISTANCE OF THE META AND CANADIAN PRESS NEWS FELLOWSHIP. THE CANADIAN PRESS

MONTREAL When Thomas Hartle indulges in a session of psilocybin treatment, the end-of-life anxiety, distractio­ns and noises associated with his terminal colon cancer go away.

“Before the treatment, it’s like you’re sitting in your car. It’s summer. You have your windows down; you’re stuck in rush-hour traffic; it’s noisy …. It’s unpleasant,” said Hartle, who lives in Saskatchew­an.

“Your favourite song is on the radio, but you can’t actually appreciate any of it because all of the other distractio­ns are preventing you from even noticing that the radio is on. After a psilocybin treatment, (it’s like) you’re still in your car, in traffic, but you have the windows up; the air conditioni­ng is on and it’s quiet. It’s just you and the music.”

Hartle, 54, is one of the very few Canadians to have received legal psychedeli­cs psychother­apy for a mental health condition since Health Canada made it easier in January for health-care workers to access psilocybin — the hallucinog­enic compound found in some mushrooms.

In Montreal, meanwhile, a pioneering clinic in the emerging field of psychedeli­c-assisted psychother­apy is about to become the first health-care facility in Quebec to legally treat depression with psilocybin.

“It’s a privilege to be able to accompany people in the exploratio­n of their psychologi­cal distress and to offer something different than convention­al treatment such as antidepres­sants,” Dr. Andrew BuiNguyen, of the Mindspace by Numinus clinic, said in a recent interview.

Bui-Nguyen said his clinic received Health Canada’s approval on May 5 to care for a patient who had undergone several unsuccessf­ul treatments for depression.

“There’s a rigorous screening procedure,” Bui-Nguyen said, adding that Quebec’s health insurance plan doesn’t cover the treatment. “We look at the diagnosis, the medical history, if there’s a risk of addiction, what treatments have already been tried …. There must have been a lot of treatments done beforehand so the applicatio­n is solid.”

Health Canada on Jan. 5 restored its “Special Access Program” — abolished under former prime minister Stephen Harper in 2013 — allowing health-care experts to request access to restricted drugs that have not yet been authorized for sale in the country.

Before January, people could only access psychedeli­c-assisted psychother­apy through clinical trials or medical exemptions.

Now, licensed experts can file applicatio­ns on behalf of patients with mental health conditions such as post-traumatic stress disorder, depression and anxiety, but for whom convention­al treatment has failed.

Health Canada says it has received 15 requests for the use of psilocybin or MDMA — a psychedeli­c drug with stimulant properties — since resuming the program.

In April, a clinic called Roots To Thrive, in Nanaimo, B.C., became the first health centre in Canada to offer a legal psilocybin group therapy program, in which Hartle took part.

“The therapy part has a capital T in this whole process,” Hartle said. “It isn’t just taking psychedeli­cs. It’s just a tool in the process; the therapy is crucial to getting a good outcome.” Psychedeli­c-assisted treatment, Bui-Nguyen explained, requires multiple therapy sessions before and after patients experience the drug. Patients will consume psilocybin while they are supervised by two psychother­apists and remain in the clinic-secured environmen­t for up to six hours.

“It’s not miraculous,” Bui-Nguyen said. “You don’t take psilocybin and that’s it, a psychedeli­c trip and after the depression is cured — no! The patient has a lot of work to do. But it opens perspectiv­es; it creates new paths in the brain that we aren’t used to taking. The patient then explores new roads to get out of depression.”

In the world’s largest study on psychedeli­cs’ affect on the brain, released in March in the journal Science Advances, lead author Danilo Bzdok said psychedeli­c drugs might just be the next big thing to improve clinical care of major mental health conditions.

“There’s something like a renaissanc­e, a reawakenin­g of psychedeli­cs,” Bzdok, associate professor with McGill University’s biomedical engineerin­g department, said in a recent interview.

He said the evidence-based benefits are very promising. Patients, he said, say they have experience­d up to six months of lasting effects after a single psychedeli­c-aided therapy session.

They have also experience­d a reduction of symptoms associated with mental health conditions, Bzdok said, adding that there were fewer side-effects compared to antidepres­sants. Mindspace by Numinus CEO Payton Nyquvest said psychedeli­cs have the potential to become a widespread treatment. As Health Canada continues to approve more requests, he hopes the recognitio­n will make the treatment much more accessible.

“We haven’t seen significan­t innovation in mental health care in probably over 40 years,” Nyquvest said in a recent interview.

“We’re at a time where new and better treatments for mental health are needed now more than ever. No matter what you look at, depression, anxiety, and suicidalit­y ... these are all rates that continue to go up with no clear line in terms of how we’re going to address these massive societal issues. Psychedeli­cs represent an opportunit­y to make a significan­t impact.”

Hartle’s own experience echoed those hopes. “The improvemen­t in my mental health is so night and day that it would be difficult to say all of the things that it does for me,” he said.

“I still have cancer. I still have difficulty with what it physically does, but there are days when I don’t even think about it. What would you do to have a day where you just feel normal?”

 ?? GRAHAM HUGHES THE CANADIAN PRESS ?? Dr. Andrew Bui-Nguyen works at pioneering clinic in the emerging field of psychedeli­cassisted psychother­apy in Montreal.
GRAHAM HUGHES THE CANADIAN PRESS Dr. Andrew Bui-Nguyen works at pioneering clinic in the emerging field of psychedeli­cassisted psychother­apy in Montreal.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada