The Indianapolis Star

Indiana lawmakers move along ‘magic mushroom’ research bill

- Kayla Dwyer

Convention­al medicine doesn’t always cut it for people with the most stubborn, chronic illnesses, like treatment-resistant depression and posttrauma­tic stress disorder.

So Indiana’s medical profession­als want funding to study an alternativ­e: psilocybin, known more commonly as magic mushrooms.

Lawmakers are considerin­g a bill to establish a state fund for researchin­g the clinical use of so-called shrooms, a schedule I drug that the U.S. Food and Drug administra­tion has given “breakthrou­gh therapy” status to enable clinical research.

“This bill in no way seeks to legalize anything today that isn’t legal today — I want to make that clear,” Sen. Ed Charbonnea­u, R-Valparaiso, said in a Senate committee hearing Wednesday while introducin­g his bill, Senate Bill 139. “I want to elevate the discussion.”

The positive effects of psilocybin have been documented in many mainstream journals by scientists at multiple research institutio­ns, from Johns Hopkins University to New York University. A Johns Hopkins study found that shrooms curbed depression symptoms in patients with moderate to severe depression for up to a year.

“This is in no way fringe science,” said Dr. Richard Feldman, a family physician and the former state health commission­er.

Psilocybin, a psychedeli­c chemical derived from certain mushrooms, works by improving brain plasticity, which is the ability for neurons in the brain — typically isolated from one another in depressed people — to communicat­e.

Feldman calls it a “brain reset.”

And unlike traditiona­l anti-depressent­s, psilocybin doesn’t show signs of suppressin­g other emotions, said Brandon Weiss, a researcher at Johns Hopkins.

It’s not just for depression.

Ken Maxwell, a veteran from North Carolina, testified that a clinical trial of magic mushrooms helped diminish the severity and frequency of his cluster headaches — so debilitati­ng and painful, he calls them “suicide headaches.”

“It was psilocybin that made this disease managable and gave me my life back,” he said.

The Senate Health and Provider Services committee passed the bill unanimousl­y Wednesday. It now moves to Appropriat­ions.

Contact IndyStar state government and politics reporter Kayla Dwyer at kdwyer@indystar.com or follow her on Twitter @kayla_dwyer17 .

 ?? PROVIDED BY EARTH’S WISDOM ?? Psilocybin fungi during the harvesting process.
PROVIDED BY EARTH’S WISDOM Psilocybin fungi during the harvesting process.

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