Pubdate: Mon, 31 Oct 2005 Source: World-Spectator, The (CN SN) Copyright: 2005 The World-Spectator. Contact: http://www.world-spectator.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/2914 Author: Kay Parley LSD AND DISTORTED PERCEPTION Dear Editor: "The Psychedelic Pioneers," a documentary about experiments with LSD in Saskatchewan in the 1950s and 1960s, will air on SCN on Oct. 26 at 9 p.m. Interest in the drug may revive. It is being used in the treatment of people addicted to crack cocaine and to crystal meth, apparently with some success. The news really doesn't frighten me, because I am well-acquainted with LSD. I trained in psychiatric nursing at Weyburn when the first experiments were underway. Later as Dr. Hoffer's team leader at University Hospital, Saskatoon, I won a reputation as a good LSD sitter and guided quite a few treatments. I published the first article about the nurse's role in LSD (American Journal of Nursing, 1964), and yes, I took it once. Because it distorted perception, LSD was believed to produce a model of schizophrenia, so many professionals took it hoping to increase empathy for their patients. A note in the Leader-Post announcing the film stated the Saskatchewan group trained their psychiatric nurses with LSD to make them more empathic toward psychotic patients. That is misleading. It would be highly unethical to give a drug to students as part of training. Few students took LSD and, when graduates took it, they took it voluntarily. The drug was not given to schizophrenic patients. Alcoholics and people with various character disorders found it beneficial. Every subject was screened and they had to clarify what they hoped to achieve by taking LSD. The doctor administered the drug (100 to 400 micrograms of clear liquid in water) and often talked to the patient until it took effect. The sitter spent the whole day with him. Where possible, we allowed a patient a choice of nurse because someone under LSD would be sensitive and could easily suffer a sense of rejection or become suspicious. He needed an understanding companion. He was never left alone for an instant. The nurse was his anchor, reminding him he was in hospital and that he would be returning to the world of "reality." Everything was done to keep the atmosphere pleasant and comfortable. No one entered but the doctor. There was always flowers. Music selected by the patient the day before would be played. Often there was a period of four hours or more when the patient didn't speak, but the nurse couldn't allow her concentration to slip. Sitting a treatment was draining, and often we refused to sit another for three or four weeks, to give ourselves time to re-group. We were not "trained" to be LSD sitters. We had a handbook based on Duncan Blewett's observations of a typical session. It was believed that if you had been through a LSD experience, you made a better sitter. The role required empathy and commitment, as well as flexibility. It helped to be intuitive Above all, it required an attention span at least eight hours long. LSD was unpredictable. The subject might experience "a good trip," with little anxiety and lots of insight. He might enjoy seeing colors brighter, all perception enhanced. A "bad trip" was hellish and accomplished little. Sometimes a subject would experience a second treatment at a later date and have a completely different day. Considering the risk, why do I not fear the return of LSD? LSD seems to be the polar opposite of the dangerous street drugs. It actually enhances the moral sense and can lead to growth of self-respect and sometimes to strengthening of character. It causes the subject to confront himself. It is not associated with violence and crime. Of course it is risky, but psychiatry used pure LSD in minute doses and under extremely well-controlled circumstances. Dr. Osmond once wrote he regretted telling Timothy Leary about his hopes for the drug, because Leary promptly popularized it. Thousands of young people began taking it sometimes in impure form, in questionable dosage, without proper supervision. They were not screened for symptoms which might have indicated danger of developing a psychosis. For more than a decade, we had a continent of "heads" wandering around in pretty abnormal states. There was an outcry against LSD. When flashbacks began to occur, symptoms returning weeks or months after an experience, questions rose as to whether LSD was as safe as we had believed. As these fears surfaced, in the mid 1960s, Saskatchewan discontinued the drug. Now it is back in use. Will it get out of hand again? Who knows? I only know I would rather see a lot of LSD around than a lot of crystal meth. Remember how the hippies used to hand out flowers? They may have been stoned, but they talked of peace. KAY PARLEY Saskatoon - --- MAP posted-by: SHeath(DPFFlorida)