About 65 scientists, doctors, advocacy workers, and even a farmer or two arrived on a recent morning at a glassy medical building in South Lake Union. They crowded into a lecture hall, coffees in hand, to discuss the next frontier of treating substance-use disorders and addiction: psychedelics.
The meeting of minds was timely for several reasons. In fewer than nine months, Oregon’s nascent psilocybin industry can begin applying for licenses to manufacture, transport and sell the psychedelic derived from certain mushrooms for use in supervised therapy. And in October, Seattle became the nation’s largest city to decriminalize psilocybin.
And there was an official reason for the meeting: Washington’s flagship public university is creating a new research hub devoted to using psychedelics to treat addiction. The South Lake Union meet-up marked the center’s launch. Psychedelics are gaining ground as a therapy for treatment-resistant depression; in November, the largest-ever trial of psilocybin and depression found the drug was highly effective. But its potential use against substance-use disorders is less well understood.
Dr. Jürgen Unützer, who chairs the psychiatry and behavioral sciences department at the University of Washington School of Medicine, kicked off the morning with a reflection on the importance of serious study on alternative remedies for substance-use disorders — especially those impervious to standard treatment.