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

Designing Safety: Why Trauma-informed Models Must Lead the Psychedelic Renaissance

Published

on

This article was submitted by Lucy da Silva, Psychedelic Support Therapist and CEO Silva Wellness, as part of Psychedelic Health’s op-ed program. To submit article ideas, please email news@psychedelichealth.co.uk

 

I once was addicted to alcohol and drugs, which I was lucky enough to overcome through the 12-step programme. This journey was steeped in peer support and a real sense of community. Over the past five or so years, I have also had my fair share of psychedelic healing experiences, most of them in group settings.

Entering this sphere, I was fortunate to come from a place of internal containment and grounding, since my healing journey had begun long before my first psychedelic experience in a ceremonial setting. As a qualified and experienced psychotherapist, I was well versed in self-care, the analytical lens of Jungian interpretation and, most importantly, trauma knowledge and containment.

What these seeds of experience began to sow for me was an awareness of how clinical excitement can sometimes overshadow the slower work of building adequate systems that protect, hold and integrate – striking the delicate balance between respect for indigenous traditions and the demands of medicine-inspired healing. As a therapist, my work often focuses on the healing that takes place after harm has occurred. But my own experiences in medicine ceremonies (some profound and safe, others not so much) led me to wonder: what would it mean to design safety from the ground up?

The psychedelic field has made extraordinary progress in just a few years. Regulatory frameworks are evolving, clinical trials are expanding, and public interest is growing faster than any of us could have predicted. There’s a palpable sense of momentum—of medicine, culture and consciousness beginning to reconnect. The renaissance is not on its way—it is here! 

Come meet the leaders shaping the future of psychedelic medicine. Join PSYCH Symposium: London 2025, December 4 at Conway Hall.

Yet much of this progress still takes place within the same paradigms that shaped twentieth-century psychiatry: models focused on efficacy and access, rather than on the deeper architecture of care. We talk about scaling treatments, but rarely about scaling safety—about designing systems that protect psychological integrity as much as they deliver clinical outcomes.

The conversation about psychedelic medicine often stops at the clinic door. But the next frontier of innovation isn’t pharmacological; it’s relational, community-driven and systemic. It’s about how we build environments that recognise trauma not as an exception, but as the context from which most people seek healing. This is especially relevant when utilising psychedelics for the treatment of substance use disorders.

Co-Design Workshops: Trauma-Informed Care and Community Integration in Psychedelic Therapy

When we had the opportunity to apply for a government-backed R&D grant, it offered the chance to formalise what I had personally seen and encountered in group settings—as well as what I had heard through anecdotal conversations with individuals I met along the way, including clients who needed help processing uncontained trauma after group experiences.

With the grant focusing on individuals suffering from substance use disorders, I was motivated to propose a trauma-informed model in a group setting supported by community integration initiatives. I also wanted to address the elephant in the room: expanding access. With ketamine treatment via IV costing around £10,000 in the UK, affordability remains a serious issue. My goal was to explore how we can scale treatment options safely. We need to ensure that the very systems we design to help people heal do not inadvertently replicate harm.

Rather than studying participants, we’ll be studying systems, and asking what those systems need to look like to prevent harm before it happens.

Our study (scheduled to kick off in November 2025), Co-Design Workshops: Trauma-Informed Care and Community Integration in Psychedelic Therapy, aims to explore how safety can be intentionally designed into emerging psychedelic care models before they become mainstream. It will run as follows:

  1. Three stakeholder groups (clinicians, peer facilitators and mental health service designers) will participate in a series of co-design workshops.
  2. Using journey mapping and system mapping, the sessions will explore how trauma-informed principles can guide safe, accessible models for group-based ketamine lozenge therapy (KLT).
  3. The aim is to co-create conceptual frameworks that integrate ethical design, accessibility and community wisdom from the outset.

What we hope to learn is that safety is relational, shaped by culture and trust just as much as by clinical control. Trauma-informed practice, emotional readiness, education, and attention to set and setting before any medicine is ingested should form vital components of integration.

Promoting integration as preparation—as the precursor to treatment, as a modality in itself—mirrors what the 12-step programme does so well. Peer-led community, robust support and follow-up systems could become the scaffolding that extends care beyond the session, supporting longevity in healing.

This also ties into the concept of reducing hierarchy by amplifying lived expertise and modelling the inclusivity that psychedelic care must embody. It can help individuals lean towards treatment rather than resist it—a common challenge in both community-led and private addiction treatment programmes.

As the long-term aim of this project is to align proposed frameworks with voluntary sector and NHS infrastructure, we envisage that it could inform future service delivery and policy development. Most importantly, we hope to begin a wider discussion about how future frameworks can be wrapped in nurturing ethics and, above all, safety.

If we can integrate trauma-informed principles from the outset, the future of psychedelic therapy could look very different. We might see small, community-based groups supported by skilled facilitators who understand containment as much as chemistry. Integration models could become embedded within peer networks, where shared experience is part of the medicine itself.

Services could evolve through co-design rather than correction, shaped by lived wisdom as much as professional expertise. In this vision, innovation means not just expanding access, but building safety, inclusion and care by design.

Because the psychedelic renaissance will only ever be as safe as the systems that hold it and designing those systems is the real frontier.

As this project begins, we have a rare opportunity to slow down—to listen, collaborate and build the ethical foundations before psychedelic care becomes fully mainstream. Trauma-informed design reminds us that safety is not simply the absence of harm, but the presence of trust, transparency and relationship.

If we can weave those qualities into the structures that support psychedelic work, from the clinic to the community, we stand a chance of creating a field that heals without replicating old wounds.

This study is just the first step, but it marks an invitation to the wider field: to design consciously, collectively and with care at the centre.

Because the question is no longer whether psychedelics can heal, it’s whether we can design the systems that allow that healing to endure.

Image by andreas160578 from Pixabay

 

Continue Reading

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

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.