Australia is the first country to let patients with depression, PTSD be prescribed psychedelics
It is a class of substances that produce changes in perception, mood and cognitive processes
SYDNEY (AP/Web Desk) — Australia is now the first country to allow psychiatrists to prescribe certain psychedelic substances to patients with depression or post-traumatic stress disorder.
Beginning Saturday, Australian physicians can prescribe doses of MDMA, also known as ecstasy, for post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD). Psilocybin, the psychoactive ingredient in psychedelic mushrooms, can be given to people who have hard-to-treat depression. The country put the two drugs on the list of approved medicines by the Therapeutic Goods Administration.
Psychedelics (also known as hallucinogens) are a class of psychoactive substances that produce changes in perception, mood and cognitive processes. These affect all the senses, altering a person’s thinking, sense of time and emotions, and can also cause a person to hallucinate—seeing or hearing things that do not exist or are distorted
Scientists in Australia were surprised by the move, which was announced in February but took effect July 1. One scientist said it puts Australia “at the forefront of research in this field.”
Chris Langmead, deputy director of the Neuromedicines Discovery Centre at the Monash Institute of Pharmaceutical Sciences, said there have been very few advancements on treatment of persistent mental health issues in the last 50 years.
The growing cultural acceptance has led two US states to approve measures for their use: Oregon was the first to legalize the adult use of psilocybin, and Colorado’s voters decriminalized psilocybin in 2022. Days ago, President Joe Biden’s youngest brother said in a radio interview that the president has been “very open-minded” in conversations the two have had about the benefits of psychedelics as a form of medical treatment.
The US Food and Drug Administration designated psilocybin as a “breakthrough therapy” in 2018, a label that’s designed to speed the development and review of drugs to treat a serious condition. Psychedelics researchers have benefited from federal grants, including Johns Hopkins, and the FDA released draft guidance late last month for researchers designing clinical trials testing psychedelic drugs as potential treatments for a variety of medical conditions.
Still, the American Psychiatric Association has not endorsed the use of psychedelics in treatment, noting the FDA has yet to offer a final determination.
And medical experts in the US and elsewhere, Australia included, have cautioned that more research is needed on the drugs’ efficacy and the extent of the risks of psychedelics, which can cause hallucinations.
“There are concerns that evidence remains inadequate and moving to clinical service is premature; that incompetent or poorly equipped clinicians could flood the space; that treatment will be unaffordable for most; that formal oversight of training, treatment, and patient outcomes will be minimal or ill-informed,” said Dr Paul Liknaitzky, head of Monash University’s ClinicalPsychedelic Lab.
Plus, the drugs will be expensive in Australia — about $10,000 (roughly $6,600 US dollars) per patient for treatment.
Litnaitzky said the opportunity for Australians to access the drugs for specific conditions is unique.
“There’s excitement about drug policy progress,” he said, "... about the prospect of being able to offer patients more suitable and tailored treatment without the constraints imposed by clinical trials and rigid protocols.”
Use of Psychedelic goes back centuries in many cultures, and some are still used in religious ceremonies to experience spiritual or heightened states of awareness.
Although used in psychotherapy in the 1960s, it was stopped for mainly political reasons until quite recently. But psychedelics are slowly reappearing in psychology and psychiatry as a viable way to treat anxiety, depression, PTSD, and more.