Connect with us

Insight

Advancing psychedelic healing experiences in Europe

Field Trip Health discusses the growing cultural and medical acceptance of psychedelic medicines and integrating them into modern society.

Published

on

Advancing psychedelic healing experiences in Europe

Launching its first European therapy centre in the Netherlands in early 2021, Field Trip Health is providing psychedelic healing experiences using truffles. 

The Field Trip Health therapy centre in Europe focuses on the therapeutic use of psychedelic truffles – the underground sclerotia of mushrooms – legal in the Netherlands. 

Co-founder and executive chairman of Field Trip, Ronan Levy, explains that the centre is advancing mental health treatment options with healing psychedelic experiences through this programme embedded in science, therapy and guidance. Its other centres, based in locations across America and North America, are also focused on developing therapies with ketamine and other psychedelics as they become legalised or approved.

“Our hope for our Netherlands location is twofold. Firstly, we want to help people in the Netherlands and Europe with access to some of the most promising options for mental and emotional health and wellbeing, and we believe we can do that through access to our therapies using legal truffles, and secondly, an essential part of Field Trip’s strategy is to constantly learn and innovate with all forms of legal psychedelic therapies,” said Levy.

See also  Findings give new insight into how psychedelics help mental health

“With our Netherlands location, we have been leveraging the experience, data and know-how developed by our clinical staff in our ketamine-enhanced therapy locations in Toronto, New York, Los Angeles and Chicago to develop protocols with psilocybin-containing truffles and use those insights to help evolve our therapies with ketamine and other psychedelics as they become legalised or approved.”

Levy explains that Field Trip is aiming to become the leader in the development and delivery of psychedelic therapies, wanting to help integrate all forms of psychedelic treatments into modern society. 

To do this, Field Trip is developing next-generation psychedelic molecules – the first of which, FT-104, is a synthetic 5HT2A agonist similar to psilocybin. Its psychoactivity, however, only lasts two to three hours compared to the four to six hours of psilocybin, and has higher bioavailability.

See also  Global coalition launches to push for psilocybin rescheduling 

“We are working to fulfil this mission by establishing a best-in-class network of Field Trip Health centres around the world, aiming to have 75 locations by 2024 and by developing the best-in-class psychedelic medicines, such as our novel psychedelic molecule, FT-104, which we believe will be an incredibly effective treatment for treatment-resistant depression and post-partum depression.”

There is an increasingly open attitude to the potential benefits of these medicines following promising clinical research results for conditions such as anxiety, depression and PTSD. Such results have generated positive stories from major news outlets that, historically, have disseminated fear-mongering reports of uncorroborated dangers throughout the 50 year War on Drugs.

The last few years have seen the Australian Government back psychedelic trials for mental health disorders with a AUD$15m (~£7.90m) grant, America’s National Institutes of Health (NIH) has provided its first grant in 50 years for research into psilocybin for smoking cessation and, more recently, Canada has opened up its Special Access Programme to help authorised patients access psychedelics. Polling of UK citizens has also demonstrated a consensus in favour of rescheduling psilocybin for research purposes.

See also  Integrating psychedelics into all fields of medicine 

“We believe that psychedelic-assisted psychotherapy will become the go-to form of mental, emotional and behavioural healthcare,” said Levy.

“With all the work organisations like Field Trip Health are doing with mainstream adoption and awareness, we are confident that both from a medical perspective as well as a cultural perspective, psychedelics will be embraced in the coming years. 

“While there are some legacy stigmas from the War on Drugs still prevalent in our society today, we are confident that these will abate as the data and evidence about the safety and efficacy of psychedelic therapies continues to emerge.”

25 per cent of the European population lives with depression and anxiety each year, and up to 30 per cent of those with major depressive disorder have treatment-resistant depression (TRD) – meaning their condition is unresponsive to traditional treatments. In 2015, the economic impact of mental health disorders in the EU was estmainted to be €600bn.

The last few years have seen these staggering statistics compounded by the collectively traumatic experience of the COVID-19 pandemic, which has seen a rise in levels of loneliness, depression, addictive and suicidal behaviours and self-harm, as well as decreased wellbeing for frontline workers, and decreased access to mental health services. All these factors are pointing to an urgent need for new and innovative mental health treatments and services.

See also  Could Italy decriminalise psychotropic substance cultivation? 

“The prevalence of mental health issues is at an all-time high and is being exacerbated by the COVID-19 pandemic,” said Levy. “The evidence shows that psychedelic-assisted therapies are effective in treating mental health, and we are seeing this firsthand in our Field Trip Health centres, with many of our clients reporting significant improvements in their mental health and well-being (according to objective questionnaires) for 120 days or more post-treatment.

“But the benefits of psychedelic therapies don’t just stop at mental and emotional health and well-being. Studies have shown that people who struggle with depression tend to consume far more medical resources than those who do not experience major depression. 

“Up to 40 per cent more resources according to some studies. By offering a truly effective treatment for depression, we expect psychedelic therapies will reduce the load on our healthcare systems. Similarly, we find that following psychedelic therapies, people are more able to adopt better lifestyle habits such as eating healthy and exercise, both of which will also have a positive effect on our healthcare systems. 

“The combination of these factors means that psychedelic therapies not only make great medical sense, but supporting them also makes great economic sense for employers, payors and governments.”

[activecampaign form=52]

Continue Reading
Click to comment

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Insight

Is Ketamine Therapy Only Reaching The Wealthy? Dr. Celia Morgan On Expanding Equitable Access

Published

on

Dr. Celia Morgan is one of the UK’s leading figures in ketamine and psychedelic research, especially in the domain of addiction and mental health.

Based at the University of Exeter, she holds the Chair of Psychopharmacology and leads trials exploring how ketamine, paired with psychotherapy, can break cycles of relapse in substance misuse.

Morgan has led some of the largest clinical trials on ketamine-assisted therapy for alcohol use disorder and will be speaking at the upcoming PSYCH Symposium: London 2025, to be held at Conway Hall on December 4.

“I think that the most promising findings from our work with ketamine are of the sense of agency and autonomy in their recovery that the people we are working with experience,” she told Psychedelic Health in a written interview.

Still, she thinks several key challenges need to be tackled for these treatments to be able to reach more people. One of the biggest of such challenges is ensuring equitable access to these treatments.

“We see a relatively homogenous and privileged group in most studies, our work has tried to address this,” she said.

Building the infrastructure to safely deliver these treatments in public healthcare systems is another big challenge for the industry, she said.

Yet the healthcare sector can also take advantage of Ketamine’s regulated status to allow for a faster roll-out, when compared to other psychedelics like MDMA or psilocybin.

“Some of the recent recommendations by the Royal College fo Psychiatrists are steps on the way towards more widespread use,” she said.

What distinguishes Morgan in the psychedelics field is her dual commitment. She studies the risks and harms of recreational ketamine use while simultaneously designing controlled, clinical applications for it.

One of her flagship projects is Exeter’s KARE trial (Ketamine for Reduction of Alcohol Relapse), which blends ketamine infusions with psychotherapy for patients with alcohol use disorder. Early published data show dramatic improvements in abstinence rates during six-month follow-ups, far exceeding baseline relapse rates. Morgan has also worked on trials for gambling disorder and other behavioral addictions, expanding the frontier of what ketamine-assisted therapy might treat.

Morgan also plays a role in academia’s response to the psychedelic renaissance, she’s a co-lead on Exeter’s postgraduate certificate in psychedelic studies, a program designed to train clinicians, researchers, and therapists in the science and ethics of psychedelic medicine.

“I think its important to keep on with our efforts to study, regulate and roll out these treatments principally for the patients who might benefit from psychedelics as I have seen first hand in my work,” she said.

Picture is extracted from an interview with Dr. Morgan at PSYCH Symposium’s 2022 edition.

Continue Reading

Evegreen

Did Psychedelics Influence Early Christianity? A New Review Examines the Evidence

Published

on

A newly published academic review has revisited one of the most sensational — and disputed — theories in psychedelic history: that early Christianity emerged from fertility cults using psychoactive mushrooms.

Released 9 August in the journal Religions, Richard S. Ascough’s paper, John Allegro and the Psychedelic Mysteries Hypothesis, takes a fresh look at the 1970 book The Sacred Mushroom and the Cross by Semitic philologist John M. Allegro.

Allegro claimed that Christian theology, symbols and even the figure of Jesus could be traced back to ancient rituals involving the psychoactive mushroom Amanita muscaria. His argument rested on bold linguistic links between Sumerian and Semitic languages — links that experts swiftly dismissed as unsubstantiated.

Discredited but enduring

Ascough’s review details how Allegro’s thesis was rejected almost immediately in academic circles. Mainstream scholars pointed out that Sumerian is a language isolate, making the connections Allegro proposed linguistically impossible. The fallout was severe — the book damaged Allegro’s reputation and ended his academic career.

Yet, as Ascough points out, the theory refused to disappear. In the decades since, it has surfaced repeatedly in psychedelic counterculture, cited by authors such as Carl Ruck and Terence McKenna. While scholars abandoned the thesis, parts of the public embraced it as part of a broader fascination with the potential spiritual role of entheogens.

Three key takeaways

Ascough distils his reassessment into three main findings:

  • Reception – Universally dismissed by academics, the theory nonetheless gained a cult following in popular psychedelic discourse.

  • Methodology – Allegro’s linguistic analysis is fundamentally flawed; modern scholarship offers no evidence for the deep language connections he claimed.

  • Legacy – The thesis’ real impact lies in how it helped spark public interest in the idea that psychoactive substances may have shaped religious traditions.

In short, Ascough frames Allegro’s work as “a historical curiosity” — important for its cultural footprint but not as a credible piece of entheogenic research.

Why it matters now

The review lands at a time when psychedelics are being investigated for regulated medical use in treating depression, PTSD, and end-of-life anxiety. By separating historical speculation from scientific evidence, Ascough’s work helps keep the conversation grounded.

It also highlights a longer lineage of public fascination with psychedelics — one that stretches from ancient myth to 20th-century counterculture, and now into 21st-century clinics and labs.

For those following the evolution of psychedelic medicine, the review is both a look back at one of the field’s most colourful controversies and a reminder of how far the evidence base has advanced.

Article picture is an illustration made using generative AI tools.

Continue Reading

Insight

Psychedelic-assisted therapy for treating PTSD in Ukraine brings hope

Published

on

Photo by Karollyne Videira Hubert on Unsplash

The war in Ukraine brings suffering and trauma, which naturally leads to cases of post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) among soldiers and civilians. The Ministry of Health of Ukraine predicts that about 4 million Ukrainian civilians are suffering from PTSD.

According to the WHO, about a quarter of the Ukrainian population may be affected by disorders of mental health. In order to deal with this challenge, Ukraine must ensure access to safe, effective and adequately regulated therapy.

That is also why Ukraine is trying to support the idea that mental health will become an integral part of Ukraine’s “reconstruction.” Czech Republic can in this regard offer a helping hand in the sphere of innovative therapy. That is also one of the reasons why a Ukrainian delegation took part in the international conference Novel Mental Health Treatments and Sustainability of Healthcare Systems: Czechia as a Leader of the EU? which took place in Prague.

Psychedelic-assisted therapy is being increasingly discussed in Ukraine as a way of treating PTSD. Although the use of ketamine as part of mental illness treatment has been legal since 2017, substances such as MDMA and psilocybin are still banned. With a view to global development, which has been inching towards supporting the medical use of psychedelics, Ukrainian institutions are supporting clinical studies for psychedelic-assisted therapy as an innovative way of treating PTSD.

Medical use of psychedelics in PTSD treatment in Ukraine

The potential of psychedelic-assisted therapy in the context of the war in Ukraine was also the focus of one of the conference panels. The panel was attended by Ukrainian MPs Mykhailo Radutskyi, Dmytro Gurin, Rostyslav Tistyk and State Secretary of the Ministry of Internal Affairs Inna Yashchuk.

Over the course of the day, Mykhailo Radutskyi, Member of the Verkhovna Rada of the Parliament of Ukraine and Chairman of the Committee on National Health, Health Care and Health Insurance praised the Czech Republic and said that the country is at the forefront of psychedelic research in Europe.

See also  EMA workshop: One small step for Europe, one giant leap for psychedelics

“We have a large population suffering from mental health problems, but we will most likely never have enough experts. In Ukraine, we have an information campaign on how to treat soldiers who have returned from the front, and we are proposing a law which would ensure mental health,” Radutskyi stated.

“About 3.5 million people in Ukraine, and not only soldiers and veterans, currently have mental health problems because of the war, over a million war veterans will need psychotherapeutic help, and currently about half of the veterans suffer from PTSD,” said Dmytro Gurin, Ukrainian MP and member of the Committee on National Health, Health Care and Health Insurance.

“Mental health must become an issue and must play a part in the reconstruction of Ukraine. Winning the war is one thing, but we must also win the war on mental health. One way to win this war is through psychedelic-assisted therapy, and our Parliament and the Ministry of Health will support clinical trials.

“I hope that we will soon approve a study researching the potential for treating PTSD through psychedelic-assisted therapy. Our task is to create fitting conditions for future clinical trials.”

State Secretary of the Ministry of Internal Affairs Inna Yashchuk said: “The Ministry of Internal Affairs is setting up mental health centers all over Ukraine, and I estimate that when we win, 80 % of the people will come to their doctors in need of psychological and psychiatric help. So mental health is not a problem today, but it will be a problem for the future.”

Czech Republic wants to help Ukraine with mental health issues

The event also featured a speech by the Governmental Envoy for the Reconstruction of Ukraine, Tomáš Kopečný, who said: “Ukraine’s reconstruction is not only about physical reconstruction, but also about the mental health of Ukrainian civilians and war veterans, it is about increasing capacities on site, so that the support reach is as effective as possible.”

Other experts also believe that one of the outcomes of the panel discussion should consist in the establishment of a structural relationship between the Czech Republic and Ukraine in the field of mental health, which would include scientific cooperation, exchange of know-how and joint research projects.

Scientific supervision of the ongoing exchange between Czechia and Ukraine in the field of mental health is primarily provided by Professor Jiří Horáček of the Faculty of Medicine at Charles University and director of the Centre for Advanced Studies of Brain and Consciousness at the National Institute of Mental Health, who has prepared an innovative clinical study of using ketamine for the treatment of PTSD in Ukrainian veterans.

In Czech Republic, the topic is also addressed by the Psychedelic Research Foundation (PSYRES). Its director, Jana Bednářová, has said that: “Research about psychedelics is crucial for the future of Ukraine and the Czech Republic. While such research will put Czech Republic on the cutting edge of the field in Europe, without breakthrough solutions for Ukraine, it can take an entire generation to regenerate mental health – in comparison, the physical recovery of the country can be a matter of mere years. Our mission is to enlist visionaries, philanthropists, organizations and the general public to support our research projects and activities and help us make treatment available to everyone who may need it.”

The issue has been resonating in Brussels, Czechia among EU leaders in mental health

The Czech Republic was the first country to put mental health back on the EU’s agenda. The Czech trial in Brussels also leads to the topic of psychedelic-assisted therapy in the treatment of PTSD in Ukraine. The topic was first addressed last year by PsychedelicsEUROPE, a platform focussing on the European regulation of psychedelics. The platform has long been working towards the approval of a new regulatory framework for the medical use of psychedelics on the European single market.

“Mental health is becoming a central issue for the EU. We are a little behind the US, the UK and Australia, but the necessary debate about the regulation of psychedelic substances is coming to Europe. In the same way that psychedelic-assisted therapy can help Ukraine, Ukraine can help the EU in this field by providing data from new research which may help with drafting good legislation. This is one of the reasons why mental health ought to be an implicit part of Ukraine’s reconstruction,” said Viktor Chvátal, founder of PsychedelicsEUROPE.

The event was organised by:

PSYRES
The mission of PSYRES, the Psychedelic Research Endowment Fund, is to provide funding to scientific projects and facilities that focus on innovative treatment procedures in the field of mental illnesses. Our task is to support research and study of the potential of psychedelics and their therapeutic use in psychiatry, neurology and addictology. Our activities help with the preparation and implementation of clinical studies and analyses and with the education of the public. We collaborate with doctors, therapists and researchers who deal in depth with altered states of human consciousness.

INSTITUTE FOR RATIONAL ADDICTION POLICIES
Institute for Rational Addiction Policies is a multidisciplinary association of independent and prominent experts who address the issue of addiction from all angles – public and individual health, legislation and other legal implications, including security challenges, and economics including market modeling, tax, economic impacts on public budgets, the field of education and prevention, and finally also the fields of social and sociological and political science.

PSYCHEDELICS EUROPE
PsychedelicsEUROPE (PE) is an innovative public affairs mental health platform based in Brussels that brings together leading research centres, NGOs, investors, philanthropists and private companies. Based on the latest scientific evidence, PE advocate in the EU for a regulatory environment that promotes modern therapies, cutting-edge research, and innovative industry.

Continue Reading

Trending

Psychedelic Health is a journalist-led news site. Any views expressed by interviewees or commentators do not reflect our own. We do not provide medical advice or promote the personal use of psychedelic compounds. Please seek professional medical advice if you are concerned about any of the issues raised.

Copyright © 2025 PP Intelligence Ltd.