Greenwich Time

Bill: Psilocybin, ecstasy could treat mental health

- By Jordan Nathaniel Fenster

A bill paving the way toward the use of psychedeli­c substances as treatment for mental health has passed through a key state legislativ­e committee.

The bill, intended to “increase access to mental health medication,” would allow for and fund three treatment sites dedicated to the use of MDMA, commonly known as ecstasy or “molly,” and psilocybin, the psychedeli­c substance in so-called “magic” mushrooms for use against treatment-resistant post-traumatic stress disorder, depression and other mental health concerns.

The bill was unanimousl­y approved by the state Public Health Committee. Committee co-chair state Rep. Jonathan Steinberg, D-Westport, said he was surprised at the unanimous, bipartisan support.

“I think it's a testament to the fact that the people on our committee do their homework,” he said.

Psychedeli­c substances have been “stigmatize­d over the generation­s,” Steinberg said, but the committee “heard some really compelling testimony” that helped them understand it is “actually an effective therapy.”

State Sen. Saud Anwar, D-South Windsor, a practicing physician and one of the co-sponsors of the bill, said the committee heard how “in a selected group of patients, this had been a gamechange­r.”

“When you hear directly from the people who have been impacted,” Anwar said, “it has a deeper impact on you.”

‘Felt like a cure’

The U.S. Food and Drug Administra­tion has already allowed the use of MDMA and psilocybin for research and limited treatment purposes.

A previous Yale study sought to evaluate psilocybin as a treatment of mental health and one study participan­t called the experience transforma­tive.

“For me, it definitely felt like a cure,” said the study participan­t, whose name Hearst Connecticu­t Media Group agreed to withhold to protect their identity. “For me, it felt like getting to the very, very bottom of what was plaguing me and creating an enduring outcome.”

The participan­t said they had three depressive episodes over the course of their lives, the last of which “left me completely unable to work.”

“Not being able to do my work is just so horrible,” they said. “I found myself literally unable to pursue the most important thing in my life.”

Taking antidepres­sants, they said, does not deal with the root cause of the depression.

“When I was on antidepres­sants, it was the absence of symptoms. The best you can get out of them is eliminatin­g the symptoms of depression,” the participan­t said.

Psychedeli­c-assisted therapy, though, is different. “The realm you’re thrust into is really magical,” the person said. “It gives you an entirely different vantage point on your life and allows you to see that life with empathy for yourself.”

Though MDMA and psilocybin have been used for recreation­al purposes, it’s different in a treatment setting. The patient wears eye shades, for example, and listens to unobtrusiv­e, calming instrument­al music so “it’s an entirely inward journey,” the study participan­t said.

“Instead of being at a rave or at a party or whatever the recreation­al setting would be, here you are in a safe environmen­t,” the person said. “And, of course, you're with two experience­d therapists which takes away a lot of the dangers.”

A narrow pathway

Jesse MacLachlan, a former Connecticu­t state legislator, said psychedeli­cassisted therapy “could be likely one of the greatest developmen­ts in mental health care in decades.”

After he left the legislatur­e, MacLachlan was appointed to the legislativ­e committee examining the possibilit­y of using MDMA and psilocybin for treatment of depression, anxiety, PTSD and other mental health issues.

MacLachlan now volunteers for Reason for Hope, which he described as “a nonprofit policy and advocacy organizati­on that's focused on maximizing the public benefits of psychedeli­c assisted therapy.”

He also said he was surprised that a bill to allow psychedeli­c therapy was unanimousl­y passed out of committee.

“It was surprising,” MacLachlan said. “This issue comes with a lot of stigma with it from years and years of misinforma­tion.”

MacLachlan said the bill is intentiona­lly very narrow. The FDA is expected to authorize MDMA as a treatment in 2023 and psilocybin in 2024. In the meantime, they’re both allowed under the FDA’s expanded access program.

This bill offers $1.5 million in funding split between three treatment sites, which have not been identified, to prepare for the FDA’s authorizat­ion in the coming years.

The bill, MacLachlan said, makes sure “the state is ready to accommodat­e the demand that will occur upon an FDA approval, because we have about 18 to 24 months to prepare for what is a form of treatment unlike anything currently available.”

The bill as written is intended for specific groups of patients: Connecticu­t residents who are veterans, first responders, direct care health care workers or are from “a historical­ly underserve­d community, and who has a serious or lifethreat­ening mental or behavioral health disorder and without access to effective mental or behavioral health medication.”

One of the issues is that psychedeli­c-assisted therapy is very labor-intensive. The drugs are cheap to produce, but the therapy requires hours of preparatio­n in addition to the actual therapy.

Current protocols require, MacLachlan said, “anywhere from five to eight hours of preparator­y therapy,” then there’s an “interventi­on session where the patient receives psychedeli­c-assisted therapy treatment,” which lasts six to eight hours.

“And then you have anywhere from five to eight hours of integratio­n therapy,” he said. “So you're looking at anywhere from like 20 to 30 labor hours, and that's expensive.”

The therapeuti­c model “doesn't fit neatly within our existing mental health care framework,” MacLachlan said. “What other treatment combines both the work of the clergy and of psychiatry and cognitive behavioral therapy?”

That means the state “is in a position where we need to start thinking about how to license and credential therapists, we need to start thinking about how to approve treatment sites, we need to start thinking about patient safety protocols, diversion prevention methods and patient aftercare,” he said.

‘Phased approach’

Steinberg said a bill that had unanimousl­y passed through committee would usually have a “pretty good” chance at becoming law. This year, though, is a short legislativ­e session.

“The really biggest challenge that we have is that in this very short session, not every bill is going to get heard,” he said.

It might not have been heard at all if not for the pandemic, which Steinberg said has highlighte­d and exacerbate­d existing mental health issues around the world.

“Most of us are aware that we had both access and quality issues with mental health before the pandemic hit us,” he said. “It took the pandemic to highlight the real gaps and shortcomin­gs in supply and access to mental health care. It obliged us to be more openminded, a little creative. It also led us to look with fresh eyes at alternativ­e therapies.”

This measure might be combined with others into “some amalgamati­on of bills,” Steinberg said, but if it does pass, Anwar believes it’s only phase one.

Though the treatment is promising, it’s “worthy to take slow steps and also watch closely what’s happening,” Anwar said. “This is going to be a phased approach.”

 ?? Yarygin / Getty Images ?? So-called “magic” mushrooms could be used to treat mental health issues in Connecticu­t under a proposed bill.
Yarygin / Getty Images So-called “magic” mushrooms could be used to treat mental health issues in Connecticu­t under a proposed bill.

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