STUDY PROVES SHROOMS ARE FUN TO EAT - SAM OSBORN | VBS.TV Blog
Got any terminally ill cancer patients moping around the house? Shrooms should help, according to a study published in the Archives of General Psychiatry this month.
The study, led by Charles Grob, M.D. of the Harbor-UCLA Medical Center, administered doses of Psilocybin to patients as they lay on a couch listening to music. The study lacked any discernible medical goal besides seeing whether hallucinogens are any fun to take if you have cancer. Turns out they are, judging by the patients’ response. Six months after the final dosage, depression was down 30% among the test’s patients.
An almost identical study involving healthy people was conducted several years ago at John Hopkins that found Psilocybin to “prompt positive changes in behavior and attitude that last several months, at least,” according to the study’s press release. Similarly, no objective was noted in the study besides recording the effects of what they called the “sacred mushrooms.” More than 60 of the patients reported what was deemed a “full mystical experience” on the study’s psychological trip scale, while a third of the patients said their experience matched “the importance of the birth of their first child or the death of a parent.” Looks like if anything’s been proven by these studies, it’s that federally funded medical institutions grow the best shrooms on the planet.
For more about hallucinogens, watch Hamilton’s Pharmacopeia with Dr. Sasha Shulgin, creator of a million psychedelic drugs.
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