Pubdate: Sun, 01 Mar 2015 Source: Vancouver Magazine (CN BC) Copyright: 2015 Vancouver Magazine Contact: http://www.vanmag.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/3171 Author: Daniel Wood Page: 20 AGONY VS. ECSTASY A psychedelic response to post-traumatic stress In an extraordinary project, local research scientists and therapists, specializing in newly resurgent psychedelic medicine, are seeking to confirm what others elsewhere have recently discovered. It appears that highly illegal ecstasy-MDMA- helps people overcome the living hell of treatment-resistant PTSD. In two studies done in Switzerland and the U.S., it has been shown that pure MDMA, plus intensive psychotherapy, can cure people whose lives have been shattered by horrific traumas, ones that-even after years-keep returning in flashbacks and nightmares. Vancouver psychotherapist Ingrid Pacey, 70, has spent almost half her life dealing with women on the Downtown Eastside; many are casualties of childhood abuse, and later of chronic post-traumatic stress disorder. Today, Pacey is principal investigator in a $500,000 study run by the local chapter of the Multidisciplinary Association for Psychedelic Studies (Canada). With MAPS Canada, she and a dozen health scientists, psychotherapists, and volunteers aim to replicate findings that show MDMA can produce, with psychotherapy, an almost instantaneous cessation of PTSD. With just three MDMA/therapy sessions, nearly 83 percent no longer qualified for a treatment-resistant PTSD diagnosis. After relentless suffering, including ineffective exposure to legal antipsychotic drugs, addictions, and suicidal thoughts, it appears that ecstasy allows people to finally escape the horror. "There are many people who believe in the myths of illegal drugs," says Pacey, referring to the decades-long prohibition on psychedelics. "But pure MDMA-not street MDMA, which is cut with a lot of additives-is an 'empathogen.' It makes you feel like you love the world. You can't feel danger: you can then talk about your fear without your fear shutting you down." Pacey lists other psychedelic drugs-all similarly illegal-that have recently been shown to help resolve chronic addictions and fears: LSD has been successfully used in the treatment of alcoholism; psilocybin gives great relief to those suffering end-of-life anxieties; and ayahuasca and ibogaine appear to halt life-destroying addictions. "Who knew?" she says, laughing. Permission to use the drug required a Section 56 exemption from Health Canada (the same legal wormhole that allowed Vancouver Coastal Health to open Insite). It was, says Mark Haden, chair of MAPS Canada and a UBC professor of population and public heal! th, "a journey of 1,000 emails." Approval for MAPS to receive a tablespoon-sized vial of pure MDMA from Switzerland meant acquisition, he says, of a "bomb-proof vault" at UBC and four years of negotiations. Six clients from the Lower Mainland-all victims of chronic PTSD-are subjects of the project, the first clinical psychedelic study in Canada since the mid 1970s. In the double-blind study, running to fall 2016, some get the drug, some a placebo. (The ones getting the placebo will be given MDMA after the initial study period.) Long-term assessment follows. Three identical studies exploring ecstasy's efficacy in PTSD treatment are also running in Israel and the U.S. Interest in the results is huge. And controversy is certain. Like the recent acceptance of medical marijuana, MDMA as a therapeutic medicine would challenge those who have long championed the War on Drugs. What if MDMA works? What if the use of therapeutic ecstasy or acid or hallucinogenic mushrooms could significantly reduce the costs, pegged at $46 billion a year, of North America's anxiety disorders/depression epidemic?- Daniel Wood - --- MAP posted-by: Matt