-
11 votes
-
Forget designer babies. Here’s how CRISPR is really changing lives.
6 votes -
Fifth person confirmed to be cured of HIV
13 votes -
Long COVID now looks like a neurological disease, helping doctors to focus treatments
4 votes -
UK girl with deadly inherited condition is cured with gene therapy on NHS
9 votes -
UnitedHealthcare tried to deny coverage to a chronically ill US patient. He fought back, exposing the insurer’s inner workings.
15 votes -
In a first, doctors treat fatal genetic disease before birth
5 votes -
Study: Electroconvulsive therapy more successful for depression than ketamine
6 votes -
Denmark is using Patient Reported Outcome questionnaires to improve medical care – can the patient's perception of the disease become part of the treatment?
4 votes -
Belgian scientists develop improved treatment for heart failure
4 votes -
I gave psilocybin a try
Can you answer "yes" to that statement? Tell me about it.
18 votes -
I want to give psilocybin a try
Insight once came to me after I was prepped for a surgical procedure. As my body's weight began to evaporate, a pain I had never recognized, but which must have always been sounding in the...
Insight once came to me after I was prepped for a surgical procedure. As my body's weight began to evaporate, a pain I had never recognized, but which must have always been sounding in the background noise of my being, vanished. The superadhesive worry--which sometimes frightened others as much as myself, that in order to socialize, I had learned to sometimes twist into a temporary shape resembling charm--came unstuck and peeled away. Then followed a great thought, a mandate for how I should spend the remainder of my life. Also, I needed to poop. But more than that, I needed to get out of this semi-public hospital bed and to a private space immediately, so I could allow this cosmic insight a moment to fully bloom. Time was against me. Anesthetized, I knew I was slipping toward, maybe even over, the falls past which I would forget everything of this experience until a groggy post-procedure awakening brought dull daylight and its senseless aches back to me. I had to somehow save the thought. I searched, but the bathroom gave up no markers, no specimen cup labels to write on. I wondered about tearing toilet paper into little letters, hiding them above the cabinet. But would I remember to return to read the message? With an increasingly calm desperation, I dug my nails into the flesh of my hand and repeated again and again the life-saving insight delivered during communion with the world that lay beyond pain. Please remember, please remember this thought.
When I regained consciousness, it was waiting for me like a friend who had lost patience, and now seemed much less attractive. What I had somehow stolen from the gods, secreted in my closed palm through a swim across the river Lethe, was this message: “Do Drugs.”
I had realized that analysis, working on the problem of myself both mentally and verbally, had won me no appreciable gains. Insight, I had. But relief, happiness, an improved outlook? Nothing I had done had really helped me feel better. Anesthesia instantly had. These aren’t the words of an addict coming on-line. I was a reluctant user of any substance. However, in the years following I forced myself to again undertake drug trials with my psychiatrists. Methodically, I worked through every class, waltzed backward through the eras of drugs, danced off-label with each oddball wallflower, ingested every twisted molecule to ever win over the FDA with a promise of psychiatric benefit and maybe some that merely had intrigued one of my more historically-curious doctors. When Eddie Haskell, MD wanted to resurrect a drug of the bad old days just to see what it’d do to a person, I was the patient with his hand out.
I overslept and didn’t sleep. I gained and lost a third of my body weight. My head felt like a styrofoam block, then like the slate of a blackboard being scraped with tableware. I was more or less charged, sweaty, sensitive to light, and shaky. Some drugs make you feel like Benjamin Braddock in his birthday diving suit. Others make you feel like an amnesiac idiot in Benjamin Braddock’s birthday diving suit. A common theme emerges. These substances could help me feel slower, distant from the world, claustrophobic, clammy, sensorily distorted. Sometimes, they dulled my anxiety, or dried my hair-trigger tear ducts, but they accomplished this through impairment, and very clumsily. I have never been drunk, but I think it’s like a drunk traffic cop: success in psych meds comes about by the stopping of certain avenues, slowing up of traffic, blocking lawful turns. And it’s sometimes noted in the overall impact that fewer crashes have occurred. To me this is not success. Impairment so far hasn't been healing for me. I want my turn at quoting the line, "I feel like myself again."
And so, my heart sinks at every day's new headline about psychedelics. If you follow health news at all, you know they are a hot topic, showing a ridiculous amount of promise. Despite fitting the diagnostic profile, my former home was far from anywhere with signups for studies. I reached out to several "clinics" offering psychedelic-assisted therapy. They struck me as resembling many legal weed shops--loads of young bros polishing their presentation and sanitizing an extortionate drug deal in hopes of financing a Tesla. With fees starting at 8x the plane ticket to administer and contextualize a drug that costs less than $20 a dose, I wouldn't credit their soft patter as containing much idealism.
And here I am--for other reasons besides. Yes, a part of me thought living here would put legal psychedelics within my reach, but I'm not seeing any opportunities. Now I'm kicking myself for never having tried to cultivate mushroom spores, never having ventured to ask acquaintances for a hand. I'm marooned here and psilocybin is about blow up in the States.
20 votes -
How a false science ‘cure’ became Australia’s contribution to the pandemic
5 votes -
Norway is offering drug-free treatment to people with psychosis
17 votes -
First patients to get CRISPR gene-editing treatment continue to thrive
21 votes -
Electric shocks to the tongue can quiet chronic ringing ears
10 votes -
Real-time tracking of serotonin, dopamine opens new window to the brain
4 votes -
Effect of hydroxychloroquine in hospitalized patients with Covid-19
9 votes -
Eli Lilly says its monoclonal antibody cocktail is effective in treating Covid-19
7 votes -
US Presdient Donald Trump’s antibody treatment was tested using fetal cells obtained through abortion
18 votes -
97,000 people got convalescent plasma. Who knows if it works?
7 votes -
Hydroxychloroquine: "Extra-scientific factors overrode clear-cut medical evidence"
4 votes -
Study finds hydroxychloroquine may have boosted survival, but other researchers have doubts
5 votes -
US Food and Drug Administration pulls emergency use authorization of hydroxychloroquine for COVID-19
6 votes -
Doctors express glimmers of hope as they try out new approaches against coronavirus
5 votes -
Miscounted - Kate Daly's story of being sick with COVID-19 for seven weeks while receiving a false negative test result
4 votes -
Analysis of treatment with hydroxychloroquine for 368 patients in US veterans hospitals shows more deaths, no benefit
24 votes -
The latest obstacle in the search for a coronavirus treatment: Too many drug trials
3 votes -
Remdesivir in adults with severe COVID-19: A randomised, double-blind, placebo-controlled, multicentre trial
4 votes -
Read about a new COVID-19 treatment study? It probably won't work
5 votes -
World Health Organization launches global megatrial of the four most promising coronavirus treatments
5 votes -
Ultrasound destroys eighty percent of prostate cancers in one-year study
8 votes -
Long-awaited cystic fibrosis drug could turn deadly disease into a manageable condition
9 votes -
Eighty years on, the debate over electro-convulsive therapy continues
11 votes -
Academic claims she's discovered anal suppository 'cure' for homosexuality: A semen-eating worm is supposedly the cause of being gay.
8 votes -
Developing a permanent treatment for lactose intolerance using gene therapy
7 votes -
When a treatment costs $450,000 or more, it had better work
8 votes -
There's a gold-standard treatment for opioid addiction, one of America's top killers. What keeps treatment centers from using it?
11 votes -
HIV is reported cured in a second patient, a milestone in the global AIDS epidemic
17 votes -
CBD: Rising star or popular fad?
9 votes -
China investigates HIV contamination of 12,000 blood plasma treatments
6 votes -
UK Biobank data on 500,000 people paves way to precision medicine
8 votes -
Is Cannabidol an effective antipsychotic?
4 votes -
BCG vaccine leads to long-term improvement in blood sugar levels in type 1 diabetes patients
6 votes -
US President Donald Trump signs 'Right to Try Act' aimed at helping terminally ill patients seek drug treatments
12 votes