Futurity

Can psychedelics without hallucinations improve mental health?

On this episode of the Big Brains podcast, a researcher breaks down his investigation of psychedelics for treating mental health disorders.
An illustration of a brain with colorful swirling patterns around it and a different colored pattern inside it.

Can psychedelics without the hallucinations become a new mental health treatment? David E. Olson is investigating just that.

The United States is facing a real mental health crisis. In the last few years, one possible treatment has gotten a lot of press: psychedelic drugs.

But what is actually happening in a person’s brain when they take a psychedelic? Could understanding the biology and the chemistry allow us to make better and safer versions of these drugs—and maybe even create psychedelics without the hallucinations?

Olson, founding director of the UC Davis Institute of Psychedelics and Neurotherapeutics, and his lab have been researching the therapeutic effects of psychedelic drugs and how they could be used to treat neuropsychiatric diseases, including depression, anxiety disorders, and even addiction. His lab is researching how to develop non-hallucinogenic psychedelics, also called next-generation neurotherapeutics.

In this episode of the Big Brains podcast, Olson explains his work and what it could mean for mental health treatment:

Read the transcript of this episode.

Source: University of Chicago

The post Can psychedelics without hallucinations improve mental health? appeared first on Futurity.

More from Futurity

Futurity5 min read
6 Tips To Help Your Kid Sleep Better
Many bedtime battles stem from children’s after dark worries, a national poll suggests. And while most families have bedtime rituals to help their little ones ease into nighttime, many also rely on strategies that may increase sleep challenges long t
Futurity4 min read
AI Could Predict Alzheimer’s Disease Risk
A new artificial intelligence computer program, or model, shows promise in one day predicting if someone with mild cognitive impairment will develop the dementia associated with Alzheimer’s disease. Trying to figure out whether someone has Alzheimer’
Futurity4 min read
It May Be Hotter Than Your Weather App Says
There’s a strong chance that this summer’s scorching temperatures have been even hotter than reported for those living in underserved urban areas, according to new research. It’s been well established that more impoverished areas within cities are ty

Related Books & Audiobooks