wearable technology

This Year in Psychedelics - 2021

Before we get into this recap of the biggest psychedelic news stories from 2021, I’d like to address the fact that this blog post is coming out a month late. Normally I strive to publish my yearly recaps on New Year’s Eve, but things have been really hectic on my end lately and I’ve been barely keeping up with putting out the weekly link roundups, much less creating monthly and yearly recaps or other types of content.

So I apologize for not getting this out into the world sooner. I’ve started to realize that I bit off way more than I can chew over the last year and fell behind on things here at Think Wilder. Here’s hoping 2022 will be a little more focused so I can meet my deadlines and get my work out in a timely manner for y’all to enjoy!

Just like last month’s recap, there is no video recap of this year’s psychedelic news recap up on YouTube. I’ll have another update about some changes coming to my YouTube channel that should hopefully be out later this week on my channel, so make sure you subscribe there if you’d like to be informed about things on that front.

Moving on to the main show, there was a ton of huge news in 2021. Without further ado, let’s jump into the news.

Policy

Wins

Nine U.S. cities decriminalized psychedelics:

When it comes to cannabis policies there were several successes at the state level, even though attempts to change things at the federal level were unsuccessful. Four states legalized weed:

In addition, Alabama legalized medical marijuana and New Jersey and Louisiana decriminalized cannabis.

Taking things a bit further, Baltimore, MD and Scotland decriminalized the use of all drugs.

The governors of Connecticut and Texas signed legislation that will enable the states to study the therapeutic potential of psychedelics. And New Zealand legalized drug checking, becoming the world’s first country to do so.

Industry

One of the biggest stories in the psychedelic industry involved the fight over patenting various aspects involving psychedelics. The one that probably stirred up the most discontent was when COMPASS Pathways submitted a patent application that attempted to claim the right to common, preexisting psychedelic therapy techniques. This prompted a discussion about patents in psychedelia, with many people wondering if companies should own the future of the field. COMPASS Pathways has five U.S. patents and a total of ten worldwide, so they are quickly claiming rights to a lot of intellectual property in the space. But not without a fight—last month a non-profit known as Freedom to Operate submitted a new legal filing that argues against COMPASS Pathways’ patent on its form of synthetic psilocybin based on the idea that it is not a novel invention. The results from this case will set a precedent for not just COMPASS Pathways but for other psychedelic companies as well.

Psychedelic companies started making waves on the stock markets around the world, with five companies joining the Nasdaq (Mindmed, atai Life Sciences, Field Trip Health, Enveric Biosciences, and Bright Minds Biosciences) and Cybin joining the New York Stock Exchange.

Psychedelic companies secured a historic amount of funding, estimated at a cool $2 billion.

A few other interesting stories in the realm of psychedelic industry from 2021:

Research

Published Studies

Several studies came out:

Future Studies

Looking ahead:

  • A study looking to treat tobacco addiction with psilocybin will receive federal funding

  • The NIH granted Yale nearly $200k to fund the studying of psilocybin for depression and obsessive-compulsive disorder

  • The Australian government earmarked $15 million for psychedelic research

  • The DEA has proposed a dramatic increase in the production of cannabis and psychedelics for research in 2022

Research Centers

A record-breaking number of psychedelic research centers were announced or opened:

In addition to these new psychedelic research centers, Harvard Law School’s Project on Psychedelics Law and Regulation will contribute to the effort to create evidence-based laws and policies involving psychedelics.

Harm Reduction

The FDA and CDC issued warnings to consumers about potential risks involving delta-8 THC, a relatively new psychoactive cannabinoid that has grown in popularity due to its widespread legality but remains essentially unregulated at this time. Apparently there has been a significant increase in reported adverse health effects from people using this drug.

However, before you go ahead and toss any of these products you may already own out of the window, it may be helpful to know that it’s not like people are getting poisoned. In fact, it’s far more likely that they are unintentionally getting high after using delta-8 THC because of misunderstandings, bad labeling, and a lack of experience.

The Fireside Project has been helping people process psychedelic experiences via its free peer support phone line since it launched last April, but the organization took things to the next level by releasing a psychedelic peer support app. Now psychonauts in need of support can find help on either the phone or via chat, which may be helpful for people who prefer one form of communication over another.

Drug checking is an essential practice for any responsible psychonaut, and new technologies are coming out that will ensure more innovative and accurate results than ever before. The popular harm reduction organization known as DanceSafe released a new ketamine test kit (called the Morris reagent) that was engineered to identify the difference between ketamine and common analogues like DCK and 2FDCK. And a startup called Miraculix took things one step further by creating rapid at-home test kits that can assess the potency of various psychoactive drugs, including MDMA, LSD, and psilocybin.

Harm reductionists have yet another tool that can be used to help psychonauts use drugs as safely as possible; a new app called Pill-iD lets users scan pills to see what they contain.

However, it’s not a perfect option because rather than find out what’s actually inside a pill, the app instead uses machine learning to cross-check the user’s image against a large database of scanned pills to provide details about what drug is actually contained within, the risk level from taking it, and any potential side effects.

So while it’s not advisable to rely solely on this new app to find out what’s inside your pill, it could help inform naïve users that there is a possibility they might have bought an adulterated drug. As I’ve tried to hammer home over and over again, it’s always advisable to use a reagent test kit to further rule out the possibility that your pills contain unwanted drugs and to properly weigh your substances before you take them.

Miscellaneous

What a year! Tons of new psychedelic research studies, a streak of drug policy reform wins, the growing psychedelic industry, and several important developments in psychedelic culture… last year was certainly a lot to take in.

Now that you’ve read my recap of the biggest psychedelic news from 2021, I’d like to recommend the following highlights from other publications that you might enjoy:

And lastly, I will leave you with the links to the annual psychedelic news recaps I’ve published over the last six years. I hope you have a wonderful 2022 and make sure you subscribe to my monthly newsletter to keep up-to-date with all the latest psychedelic news.

Previous Years in Psychedelics

That’s all for this year’s update. Remember to always test and weigh your drugs and until next time—keep thinking wilder.

Think Wilder is reader-supported. If you enjoyed this year’s update, please consider helping out by becoming a patron, making a one-time donation, or sharing this post with a friend. Thank you for your support.

This Week in Psychedelics - 11.19.21

Cannabis

  • U.S. Republicans move to decriminalize marijuana at federal level (Reuters)

  • Germany Set To Legalize Marijuana Nationwide After Major Parties Reach Agreement (Marijuana Moment)

  • Brazil is on The Brink of Medical Cannabis Change (High Times)

  • Is This The First Real Case Of Fentanyl-Tainted Marijuana In The U.S.? (Forbes)

  • Indiana Democratic Party Backs Marijuana Legalization And Pledges 2022 Reform Push (Marijuana Moment)

  • New York Senator Files Bill To Extend Marijuana Equity Benefits To Transgender And Non-Binary People (Marijuana Moment)

  • Straws Lined with THC Could Transform Edibles Industry (High Times)

  • Bipartisan Wisconsin Lawmakers Unveil Marijuana Decriminalization Bill (Marijuana Moment)

  • New study shows no increase in car crash injuries after marijuana legalized (Vancouver Sun)

  • Canadian Groups Gives Free Weed And Edibles To Fight Opioid Abuse (High Times)

  • Marijuana Legalization Attitudes Vary Significantly Within Partisan Coalitions, Pew Survey Shows (Marijuana Moment)

  • Creating a better cannabis cultivation facility while strengthening relationships with third-party testing labs (Marijuana Business Daily)

  • Sturdy Hemp Structures Could be the Future Eco-Building (High Times)

  • Using cannabis in pregnancy linked to aggression and anxiety in children, a study suggests (CNN)

  • Study: Scarification of cannabis seeds, certain disinfectants boost germination rates (Marijuana Business Daily)

LSD

  • MindMed Launches Study of Low-Dose LSD Effects on Sleep and Cognitive Measures (Psilocybin Alpha)

  • Up, Up and Away: The Trippy Tales Behind ‘Flying Over Sunset’ (The New York Times)

  • Is LSD Safe - Latest Research Findings (Drug Science)

  • The LSD Comedown: Navigating the After Effects of Acid (DoubleBlind)

Magic Mushrooms

  • Bill on magic mushrooms aims to make Pa. a national leader in psychedelic research (The Philadelphia Inquirer)

  • NYC Subways Ban Marijuana And Psychedelic Mushroom Ads (Marijuana Moment)

  • Magic Mushrooms, A Love Story (The New Yorker)

  • PharmaTher Announces Positive Research Results for Psilocybin Microneedle Patch (Psilocybin Alpha)

  • Tryp Therapeutics Provides Update on Clinical Hold for Phase 2a Study for Eating Disorders (Yahoo!)

  • TheraPsil and Imperial College London, McGill University Partner on Psilocybin Study (Truffle Report)

  • Red Light Holland Psilocybin Truffles, Sold in The Netherlands, Complete First Evaluation Under a Health Canada Approved cGMP Laboratory (Psilocybin Alpha)

  • Another Life: Foraging for mushrooms and natural psychedelics (The Irish Times)

MDMA

  • World's 'Strongest-Ever' Ecstasy Pill Found in English Nightclub (VICE)

DMT

  • Algernon Announces Positive Feedback on its Planned Phase 1/2a DMT Human Stroke Study (Yahoo!)

  • Discussions With FDA Provide Guidance for Phase IIb Clinical Trial Design for DMT-Assisted Therapy for Major Depressive Disorder (Psilocybin Alpha)

Ayahuasca

  • Is This Phoenix Pastor a Spiritual Shaman or an Ayahuasca Kingpin — or Both? (Phoenix New Times)

  • Ron White’s strange ayahuasca experience, as described on JRE. (Ceng News)

5-MeO-DMT

  • Mike Tyson ‘died’ while tripping on psychedelic toad venom (New York Post)

  • Biomind Labs Completes Development of a Thermosensitive Nasal Gel Pharmaceutical Dosage Form (Business Wire)

Novel Psychoactive Substances

  • New Psychedelic Molecules: What’s in Development? (Truffle Report)

  • New Psychedelic Molecules Part II: Key Industry Players (Truffle Report)

  • Researchers train computers to predict the next designer drugs (ScienceDaily)

  • BetterLife Pharma says pharmacology data on second-generation LSD derivative confirms its projected non-hallucinogenic property (Proactive Investors)

Ketamine

  • Michael J. Fox Foundation Grant Will Fund First Clinical Trial of Ketamine to Treat Depression in People with Parkinson’s Disease (Yale School of Medicine)

  • Warning of ‘wild west’ in depression treatment as UK clinics offer ketamine (The Guardian)

  • Bexson Biomedical Announces Expansion to Treat Major Depression with Wearable Ketamine Formulation (PR Newswire)

  • Silo Pharma and Strategic Partner Zylo Therapeutics Begin Development Process for Novel Ketamine Loaded Z-Pods (Psilocybin Alpha)

DXM

  • Teenagers are ‘robotripping’ in the pursuit of cheap highs, again (Screenshot Media!)

Miscellaneous

  • Jon Hopkins’s Psychedelic Journey to a New Way of Creating Music (The New York Times)

  • "Aharon said it was healing:" How psychedelic therapy was undermined by abuse (Inverse)

  • Psychedelics Use Associated With 55 Percent Decrease In Daily Opioid Consumption, Study Finds (Marijuana Moment)

  • Horizons Conference Reconvenes in NYC to Connect Psychedelic Communities (Lucid News)

  • New Non-Profit Supports Groundbreaking HPPD or ‘Acid Flashback’ Research (Truffle Report)

  • Inside The Race To Create A Two-Hour Psychedelic Therapy Experience (Forbes)

  • Psychedelics Help Heal Childhood Trauma, Study Finds (Benzinga)

  • Psychedelic Bypassing: When Avoidance is Mistaken for Healing (Psychedelics Today)

  • Canadian Biotech Known For Psilocybin And Cannabinoid-Based Medicines In FDA Phase 3 Trial For Bucillamine-Based Oral Covid Treatment (Forbes)

  • Three Decades of Drug Policy Reform Work (Open Society Foundations)

  • A Close Reading of the QAnon Shaman’s Conspiracy Manifesto (Lit Hub)

  • Naropa University Announces Psychedelic-Assisted Therapies Certificate (Tricycle)

  • A New Psychedelic Organization is Merging Shamanism and Science (Lucid News)

  • The Serotonin 5-HT2A Receptor: From Mice to Humans (Psychedelic Science Review)

  • Animals That Eat Psychedelics and Enjoy the Trip (Psychedelic Spotlight)

  • CaaMTech Teams Up With University of Wyoming to Study Psychedelics as Treatments for Addiction (Psilocybin Alpha)

  • MYND Diagnostics Commences Clinical Research on Alzheimer’s Disease (Psilocybin Alpha)

  • Letting people test their drugs will reduce the number of needless deaths (The Independent)

  • The History of Psychedelics: An ancient tradition (Canex)

  • MYND Diagnostics Commences Clinical Research on Multiple Sclerosis Biomarker Test (Psilocybin Alpha)

Think Wilder is reader-supported. If you enjoyed this week’s update, please consider helping out by becoming a patron, making a one-time donation, or sharing this post with a friend. Thank you for your support.

Disclaimer: "This Week in Psychedelics" does not censor or analyze the news links presented here. The purpose of this column is solely to catalog how psychedelics are presented by the mass media, which includes everything from the latest scientific research to misinformation.

This Week in Psychedelics - 10.30.20

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Cannabis

  • New Zealand Marijuana Legalization Trails In Early Referendum Results, But More Votes To Be Counted (Marijuana Moment)

  • New Jersey Lawmakers Approve Bill Providing Medical Marijuana Patient Insurance Benefits (Marijuana Moment)

  • Study: Seniors Report Using Cannabis Products to Mitigate Symptoms Associated with Older Age (NORML)

  • Mississippi Supreme Court Won’t Consider Challenge To Medical Marijuana Measure Until After Election (Marijuana Moment)

  • South Dakota: Oglala Sioux Enacts Ordinance Legalizing Marijuana Use on Tribal Lands (NORML)

  • New Jersey Marijuana Sales Could Start Just Weeks After Election Day Under Key Senator’s Plan (Marijuana Moment)

  • Study suggests that cannabis can reduce OCD symptoms by half in short term (Hindustan Times)

  • Idaho Activists Submit 2022 Medical Marijuana Initiative Following 2020 Complications (Marijuana Moment)

  • Schools And NCAA Could Ban Marijuana Sponsorships Under Bill To Let Student Athletes Monetize Their Success (Marijuana Moment)

  • Virginia NORML Calls for Legalization to Protect Marijuana Consumers from Potentially Tainted Products (NORML)

  • South Dakota Voters Back Marijuana Legalization And Medical Cannabis Ballot Measures, Poll Finds (Marijuana Moment)

  • The Music Never Stops With Jerry Garcia’s Just-Launched Cannabis Collection (Forbes)

LSD

  • Killer High: Exploring the Phenomenon of LSD-Fuelled Murder (VICE)

  • The psychedelics revolution has arrived in New Zealand (The Spinoff)

Magic Mushrooms

  • Covid Can't Kill Mushrooms: The coronavirus has infected, but not killed, the movement to bring magic mushrooms to the masses (Rooster Magazine)

  • Expanding On Psilocybin Research, John Hopkins Hoping To Hear From More Users (CBS Baltimore)

MDMA

  • ‘Sorted’ for Es? Women and Ecstasy in 1990s Britain (Chacruna)

DMT

  • SLU professor is authority on drug that landed him in jail (WWNY-TV)

Ayahuasca

  • Ayahuasca Ceremonies and Tourism Return to Costa Rica (The Costa Rica Star)

  • Studies lift the veil on psychedelic brew ayahuasca, its mental health benefits and potential to treat depression and trauma (South China Morning Post)

  • Documentary looks at mystery medicine, Ayahuasca (The Leaf Online)

Mescaline

  • What Is Mescaline? A Guide to this Cactus-Derived Psychedelic (DoubleBlind)

Synthetic Cannabinoids

  • Synthetic cannabinoids linked to increased hospitalizations and deaths in older adults with COPD (Marijuana Business Daily)

  • Synthetic Cannabis Could Disrupt The Marijuana Industry In A Big Way (Green Entrepreneur)

Ketamine

  • Wearable Ketamine Delivery Device Developed As Alternative to Opioid-Based Pain Management (Lucid News)

  • Ketamine Helps People Dislike Themselves Less (Psychedelic Science Review)

  • Pharmather Files for FDA Orphan Drug Designation for Ketamine in Neuropathic Pain (Psilocybin Alpha)

  • Can Dissociative Side Effect of “Floating” Predict Response to Ketamine in MDD? (Psychiatry Advisor)

Miscellaneous

  • No Drugs Should Be Criminalized. It’s Time to Abolish the DEA. (Truthout)

  • ‘Drug Free USA Forever’ Stamps Launched By DEA, Postal Service And Miss America (Marijuana Moment)

  • Inside the ‘Psychedelic Exceptionalism’ Debate: Should All Drugs be Legal, or Just Pot and Psychedelics? (DoubleBlind)

  • Psilocybin Group Therapy Improves Demoralization for AIDS Survivors (Chacruna)

  • Children and Psychedelics: Re-examining Cultural Paradigms (Psychedelics Today)

  • International study finds 79% of individuals who microdose with psychedelics report improvements in their mental health (PsyPost)

  • Ketamine Meditation, Jungle Tripping and Modern-Day Shamans: Meet a ‘Psychedelic Concierge’ (VICE)

  • The Role of Psychedelic Plant Medicines in Addiction Treatment (The Fix)

  • A Collective Call for Accountability in Plant Medicine Experiences (Chacruna)

  • Who owns psychedelics: patents and state therapeutic access laws (New Amsterdam Psychedelic Law)

  • Field Trip Health Ltd. Provides Update on FT-104, Its Next Generation Psychedelic Molecule in Development (Psilocybin Alpha)

  • What do Santo Daime and Raves Have in, Common? The Answer Might Move You (Chacruna)

  • Journey Colab bags $3M from 'moonshot' fund to push new development model for psychedelic treatments (Fierce Biotech)

  • Where Witchcraft Meets Plant Medicine (DoubleBlind)

Think Wilder is reader-supported. If you enjoyed this week’s update, please consider helping out by becoming a patron, making a one-time donation, or sharing this post with a friend. Thank you for your support.

Disclaimer: "This Week in Psychedelics" does not censor or analyze the news links presented here. The purpose of this column is solely to catalogue how psychedelics are presented by the mass media, which includes everything from the latest scientific research to misinformation.

Tech Startup Unveils Futuristic Anti-Virus Bodysuit with Vaping Capabilities

Zach Harris, writing for MERRY JANE:

As quarantine continues with no end in sight, people are getting restless. But more than just going back to work or dining in a restaurant, companies are beginning to explore what our favorite pastimes might look like in a future marred by viral fear. For one California tech startup, that means festival-goers watching concerts through sealed super suits with built-in beverage and vape consumption modules.

According to Fast Company, Los Angeles-based tech startup Production Club is already knee-deep in the process of designing what they call the Micrashell — an airtight half-suit and helmet that would encase the wearer for the entirety of any given festival. To ensure that those wearing the suit can easily use the bathroom, or do other things that don’t involve pants (wink, wink…), the prototype only covers the top half of the body.

An antivirus bodysuit for festivalgoers that will enable them to vape, drink, and have sex in a world ravaged by contagious disease? Sign. Me. Up.


This Month in Psychoactives - February 2020

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Let’s face the facts. It’s incredibly tough to keep up with psychoactive drug news nowadays.

There’s a ton happening, and this month was certainly no exception. In this blog post I cover the most important news stories from February so that you can stay up-to-date regarding what’s going on without having to spend all of your time tracking down stories and figuring out which ones are actually worth reading.

Here is a slimmed-down video recap version that is available for those who prefer an easier-to-digest option:

Without further ado, let’s get into the news:

First-Ever Thank You Plant Medicine Day

Last week thousands of people all across the globe shared stories on social media expressing gratitude for the important role plant medicines and psychedelic compounds played in helping address a wide range of issues.

This coordinated effort was all part of the first-ever Thank You Plant Medicine Day, which inspired stories of gratitude that were shared on YouTube, Instagram, Twitter, Facebook, Reddit, and Snapchat. This day of gratitude for psychedelics gave people the encouragement they needed to come out of the psychedelic closet online, many for the first time.

I joined in the fun too, producing a YouTube video and blog post discussing how psychedelics have helped heal me from a variety of conditions and catalyze a personal transformation that has resulted in a much different person than I was 15 years ago.

Psychedelic Companies Are About to Go Public

A psychedelic company based in Toronto will soon be listed on a Canadian stock exchange, marking the first time a business in the psychedelic space has gone public.

Mind Medicine Inc. (MindMed) is currently preparing for a Phase 2 clinical trial looking at using ibogaine to treat opioid addiction. The company is aiming to become one of the first publicly listed neuro-pharmaceutical companies developing psychedelics.

Competitors are still weighing their options. London-based company Compass Pathways has not commented on whether its planning a public listing, but Ronan Levy of Field Trip Psychedelics Inc. (also known as Field Trip) is considering a public listing, although both companies might end up getting private funding instead.

Here in the U.S., if any American psychedelic companies decide to go public they would be able to list on the Canadian Securities Exchange even though they aren’t able to do so in their home country.

Federal Vaping Flavor Ban Goes Into Effect

The federal vaping flavor ban went into effect earlier this month, banning all flavors other than menthol and tobacco in an attempt to reduce teenagers’ access to nicotine vapes.

But the reality of the situation is probably not what you’re thinking of when you hear the phrase “federal vaping flavor ban”.

The restriction only applies to one specific category of devices: cartridges or pre-filled pod devices, like the ones made by Juul. The full range of flavors is still available in several other forms though, including refillable vapes, nicotine pouches, and some disposable vaping devices.

Journal Retracts Problematic E-Cigarettes Study

A paper published in a peer-reviewed scientific journal last year was retracted this month after a review identified serious issues with its findings. The study, which was published in the Journal of the American Heart Association, falsely claimed that e-cigarette users were more likely to have had heart attacks.

However, the study’s authors didn’t get things right.

It turns out that the majority of the vapers studied had suffered a heart attack on average a decade before they even started using e-cigarettes. In other words, there isn’t sufficient evidence to conclude that there is a relationship between vaping and heart attacks.

Unfortunately, even though the study was retracted, it’s already done quite a bit of damage to e-cigarettes reputation due to widespread media coverage last year and its unlikely those same media outlets will cover the retraction.

UK Rejects Ketamine Nasal Spray

Back in December the UK granted a license to the nasal spray form of ketamine, known as Spravato or esketamine, for the treatment of severe depression. It looked like treating depression was right around the corner.

But that progress hit a stopping point this month when a UK assessment agency called the National Institute for Health and Care Excellence (NICE) decided against integrating Spravato into the UK health system. NICE expressed concerns over Spravato’s efficacy for treating depression and its cost-effectiveness, claiming there isn’t enough evidence to approve the drug at this time.

The drug’s developer, Johnson and Johnson, may file for an appeal but would need to provide new evidence to support its case in order for Spravato to eventually be incorporated into the UK’s healthcare system.

New Investigation Finds Vaping Lung Injuries Started in 2007

New cases of vaping-associated pulmonary injury, or VAPI, have decreased dramatically this year compared to 2019, but a new investigation found that contrary to popular belief, these issues didn’t actually spring up overnight last year.

In fact, it turns out they actually date back all the way to 2007.

I was right about one thing over the course of the VAPI epidemic last year—these lung injuries can be caused by more than just vitamin E acetate. The investigation found that toxic pesticides, metals, solvents, oils, and heated byproducts also led to injuries.

However, a lot of people (myself included) were wrong about something else—VAPI isn’t exclusively related to THC after all. But that doesn’t change the fact that the vast majority of cases last year involved illicit THC vape cartridges, not nicotine e-cigarettes or weed vapes sold by legally regulated shops in states that have legalized cannabis. This investigation also found that unregulated cartridges containing nicotine, CBD, or other drugs like DMT or kratom can also cause lung injuries.

We need federal regulations for vaping products now more than ever, but it turns out that problems with vaping stretch back even further than some of us previously thought.

Washington DC Psychedelic Decriminalization Ballot Measure Advances

A measure to decriminalize psychedelics in Washington, D.C. advanced this month when the Board of Elections approved the initiative’s ballot language.

Similar to other cities that have decriminalized psychedelics within the last year, the D.C. measure would not change the laws that currently ban psychedelics. Instead, it would make enforcing those laws among the lowest priorities for law enforcement and request that the attorney general and federal prosecutor stop prosecuting people for these offenses.

Marijuana Reforms Advance in Several Places

Cannabis reform efforts made a ton of progress in February. When it comes to legalizing marijuana at the state level, New Hampshire and Vermont advanced legalization bills and Ohio filed a legalization measure for the November ballot.

Medical marijuana bills in Kentucky and Alabama moved forward and lawmakers in Virginia lawmakers approved a bill to decriminalize cannabis possession in the state.

Other countries are warming up to the idea of legalizing cannabis too, with Croatia, Luxembourg, and Israel thinking about relaxing their laws. We’re still waiting on Mexico to finalize its legalization framework though.

But not all reform efforts were successful—New Mexico, Mississippi, and Arizona ran into roadblocks that may prevent the states from moving forward with legalizing recreational or medical marijuana.

Denver Holds World’s First Psilocybin Policy Review Panel Meeting

The city that started the wave of psychedelic decriminalization in America held its first psilocybin mushroom policy review panel meeting to discuss how things have been going since the fungi were decriminalized last year.

Denver’s district attorney and a sheriff deputy met with Kevin Matthews, the man behind the decriminalization movement, in front of an audience of tie-dye wearing people who came out to watch. Sara Gael Giron, a harm reduction advocate from Boulder, also served on the panel.

By all accounts it seems like things are going well so far. The first task is to figure out reporting criteria for local law enforcement agencies regarding psilocybin mushrooms, which must be done by March 31. The panel will also be responsible for presenting a report to Denver City Council a year from now on the effects of decriminalization.

Who would’ve thought that decriminalizing one of the safest psychoactive substances around would have gone so smoothly? (Well… I did, as did most psychonauts, I’d imagine.)

Will Boulder Be the Next City to Decriminalize Psilocybin Mushrooms?

And Denver might not be the only city to decriminalize psilocybin mushrooms in Colorado. It looks like advocates in Boulder are pushing for it too.

However, this reform effort would go one step further by taking the Decriminalize Nature approach that Oakland and Santa Cruz employed to decriminalize multiple psychedelic plants and fungi all at once.

New Drug Testing Techniques Can Detect MDMA and Cocaine Use

Drug testing technology continues to evolve at a rapid pace. Scientists unveiled a technique that involves using speech pattern technology to detect whether you’re under the influence of MDMA. It may sound farfetched, but is it really that much crazier than using thermal cameras at raves to find people in the crowd who are high?

And a new fingerprint test is capable of determining the difference between someone who has actually taken cocaine vs. someone who has just touched it.

It’s amazing to see all the ingenuity that goes into drug testing tech, but I can’t help but feel like that energy could be better spent on more worthy endeavors.

Philly’s Supervised Injection Site Gets Final Approval From Federal Judge

Harm reductionists in Philadelphia have a lot to celebrate this month, as a long battle to open the nation’s first legal supervised injection site finally received approval from a federal judge. Safehouse was hoping to open its doors next week but after intense opposition announced it will hold more community meetings before proceeding.

Wearable Microdosing Technology Patented

In an unexpected turn of events, the patent for a new personalized perfume technology included a section on wearable microdoses that could be consumed via spraying a scent into the air from a device like a watch. The concept was based on Philip K Dick’s sci-fi book Ubik.

Will wearable microdoses ever make it to market? Will they even work? Does it even matter in the first place? I don’t know.

Case Report Covers Extreme LSD Overdoses

An astounding paper co-authored by Mark Haden, the executive director of MAPS Canada, looked at three case reports featuring extremely large doses of LSD. Unexpected health benefits came out of these psychedelic trips, including mental health improvements, pain reduction, and an easing of opioid withdrawal symptoms. One woman accidentally consumed 500ug (5 times more than a normal dose) during her first trimester of an unknown pregnancy and the baby turned out just fine.

But the case that takes the cake belongs to a woman who accidentally mistook LSD for cocaine and snorted a whopping 55mg of LSD. That’s 550 times more than a normal dose—a completely insane amount.

All of the subjects survived and experienced bizarre health benefits.

Man Regains Sense of Smell with Psilocybin

One of the stand-out stories from Thank You Plant Medicine Day involved a man who regained his sense of smell—lost after a severe car crash two years prior—following the use of psilocybin mushrooms.

These magical fungi must be effective at treating many more issues that we know of at this time, but as more people come out of the psychedelic closet and share their experiences with the world we will continue to learn of their true potential.

Think Wilder is reader-supported. If you enjoyed this month’s update, please consider helping out by becoming a patron, making a one-time donation, or sharing this post with a friend. Thank you for your support.

Image by Psychedelic Astronaut.