I gotta agree with jnowhere.
None of this psychedelic shit is going anywhere. I work for big pharma if that carries any weight. It’s not that they even have to block it; no clinicians will even use such treatments even if they are approved unless there is a financial incentive. We have ketamine infusion clinics because ketamine doesn’t work and ppl keep desperately coming back hoping it will. If ketamine cured patients they would never come back (ppl would probably cure themselves by self medicating at home) and the clinics would go out of business. It’s simply preying on the desperate that can’t be cured.
The barrier to patent ability will be hard also. The drugs cannot be patented; their medical use might be patentable but in my legal opinion; the medical uses will not be patentable. This will make it extremely unlikely that any pharma company wants to manufacture it. Generic companies won’t think it’s worth it either because it’s such an uncommon treatment.
Ketamine has the benefits of longstanding use and acceptance in medicine and these psychedelics do not.
With the shitshow of the opioid epidemic being blamed on medical use of opioids; you can rest assured that any drug that has any reputation of being remotely recreational will not be used by clinicians even if approved out of fear. One person goes psychotic and kill’s themselves, doctor gets sued or prosecuted by our pro drug war police state; no doctor ever touches the treatment again.
I agree, and this is almost a bipartisan effort and you really hit on head on so many other major points. Just like psychologists don't earn a living curing people, they make them co dependant, that's how they make money.
And all the doctors who regularly prescribe to regular patients are scared. In most of these cases you have family doctors(internal medicine) being arrested and not just a few but alot, and for prescribing to long term pain patients what had worked for people with severe pain, now is a crime.
Then the road to approval, is long and and can be killed at many off at many different phases or trials or simply because the FDA head is told to.
Were opiods over prescribed, yes especially in those Florida 'pain management clinics' The answer is not to attack pain patients and people in need. How about trying to find a reasonable middle ground and not throwing doctors in jail and threatening the only way they know how to earn a living. These are usually family doctors who are now getting arrested and losing their licenses to practice medicine.
Many areas of medicine aren't affected and surgeons only can prescribed for up to a week and 30 Norco 10's isn't going to get the DEA to revoke their DEA numbers or licenses. Even a week of post surgery Percocets, will not trigger anything.
Throw in all the other branches of medicine that don't ever prescribe scheduled, especially opiods, meds outside the hospital or at all. Throw in all the surgeons who aren't affected, they legally can't, and you are left with family doctors or internal medicine doctors who are getting fucked over.
Basically family doctors, who in general are on the lowest end of the pay range, and have the most interaction, besides maybe some psychiatrists who actually see patients and really try to determine their real issues, and not give them a script and send them on their way.
Here's your benzos with 2 refills see me again in 3 months. Maybe that's not all, but I knew someone that was basically what happened and they were both happy with that. He got paid, they got pills( benzos). Ah, schedule 4 and yet worse to get off, of than almost all other drugs, after long term use. Who can actually get the strong barbiturates?
The thing with Marijuana was that a few people were arrested in California and some places were shut down. No real effort to clog up the courts and eh, fuck it let them get their weed, they will get else where and there is tax money to be made. Besides weed was a very steady source of income for the cartels.
A reliable steady source of income shut down, until the taxes got to high ( no pun intended).
Now I am not sure what is going on their, but it became cheaper to get it illegally and if the cartels were smart they would use better strains, aka give the grower better seeds.
Hallucinatingenic mushrooms aren't exactly high on the Federal governments list of drug problems to deal with. Then again, too many people don't want their names attached to a possible medication associated with abuse potential. As was mentioned by LucidS Dreamr, who made quite a few, spot on points.
Helping people and finding better solutions for depression, PTSD, anxiety and host of other psychiatric problems is not that high on the list of concerns of so many in power. Money, power and keeping it is.
I am not being jaded just realistic and LucidSDreamr, really hit the nail on the head of what I have arguing about, it is not about, oh this can help people. Do I really need to bring up the tired old clichè about a bridge in Brooklyn I have for sale? If you are talking about America now( where fucking over people is of no concern to those in control on either side); then you either need to grow up and understand the unfortunate reality that exists or start wearing a helmet all the time.