John Hopkins Magic Mushrooms Study is Positive
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HOPKINS SCIENTISTS SHOW HALLUCINOGEN IN MUSHROOMSCREATES UNIVERSAL \"MYSTICAL\" EXPERIENCERigorous study hailed as landmarkUsing unusually rigorous scientific conditions and measures, Johns Hopkins researchers have shown that the active agent in \"sacred mushrooms\" can induce mystical/spiritual experiences descriptively identical to spontaneous ones people have reported for centuries.\n\nThe resulting experiences apparently prompt positive changes in behavior and attitude that last several months, at least.\n\nThe agent, a plant alkaloid called psilocybin, mimics the effect of serotonin on brain receptors-as do some other hallucinogens-but precisely where in the brain and in what manner are unknown.\n\n\"A vast gap exists between what we know of these drugs-mostly from descriptive anthropology-and what we believe we can understand using modern clinical pharmacology techniques,\" says study leader Roland Griffiths, Ph.D., a professor with Hopkins\' departments of Neuroscience and Psychiatry and Behavioral Biology. \"That gap is large because, as a reaction to the excesses of the 1960s, human research with hallucinogens has been basically frozen in time these last forty years.\"\n\nAll of the study\'s authors caution about substantial risks of taking psilocybin under conditions not appropriately supervised. \"Even inthis study, where we greatly controlled conditions to minimize adverse effects, about a third of subjects reported significant fear, with some also reporting transient feelings of paranoia,\" says Griffiths. \"Under unmonitored conditions, it\'s not hard to imagine those emotions escalating to panic and dangerous behavior.\"\n\nThe researchers\' message isn\'t just that psilocybin can produce mystical experiences. \"I had a healthy skepticism going into this,\" says Griffiths, \"and that finding alone was a surprise.\" But, as important, he says, \"is that, under very defined conditions, with careful preparation, you can safely and fairly reliably occasion what\'s called a primary mystical experience that may lead to positive changes in a person. It\'s an early step in what we hope will be a large body of scientific work that will ultimately help people.\"\n\nGriffiths is quick to emphasize the scientificintent of the study. \"We\'re just measuring what can be observed,\" he says; \"We\'re not entering into \'Does God exist or not exist.\' This work can\'t and won\'t go there.\" \n\nIn the study, more than 60 percent of subjects described the effects of psilocybin in ways that met criteria for a \"full mystical experience\" as measured by established psychological scales. One third said the experience was the single most spiritually significant of their lifetimes; and more than two-thirds rated it among their five most meaningful and spiritually significant. Griffiths says subjects liken it to the importance of the birth of their first child or the death of a parent.\n\nTwo months later, 79percent of subjects reported moderately or greatly increased well-being or life satisfaction compared with those given a placebo at the same test session. A majority said their mood, attitudes and behaviors had changed for the better. Structured interviews with family members, friends and co-workers generally confirmed the subjects\' remarks. Results of a year-long followup are being readied for publication.Psychological tests and subjects\' own reports showed no harm to study participants, though some admitted extreme anxiety or other unpleasant effects in the hours following the psilocybin capsule. The drug has not been observed to be addictive or physically toxic in animal studies or human populations. \"In this regard,\" says Griffiths, a psychopharmacologist, \"it contrasts with MDMA (ecstasy), amphetamines or alcohol.\"\n\nIn the present work, 36 healthy, well-educated volunteers-most of them middle-aged-with no family history of psychosis or bipolar disorder were selected. All had active spiritual practices. \"We thought a familiarity with spiritual practice would give them a framework for interpreting their experiences and that they\'d be less likely to be confused or troubled by them,\" Griffiths says. All gave informed consent to the study approved by Hopkins\' institutional review board.http://www.hopkinsmedicine.org/Press_releases/2006/GriffithsPsilocybin.pdf\nhttp://www.hopkinsmedicine.org/Press_releases/2006/GriffithspsilocybinQ 420, dmt, dna, drugs, god, hopkins, jesus, magic, mckenna, mushrooms, mystical, psilocybin, religions, religious, shrooms, study, weed
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