For the first time, data from real-world application of psilocybin treatment under a regulated program was published by one of the Oregon clinics providing treatment.
In 2020, Oregon became the first U.S. state to legalize psilocybin for supervised therapeutic use when voters approved Measure 109. The law established a regulated framework for “psilocybin services” that include preparation, guided sessions, and integration support, administered at licensed service centers. The rollout has been gradual and cautious, given regulatory, safety, and infrastructure challenges.
Until recently, much of what was known about psilocybin therapy outcomes came from controlled clinical trials; there was little insight into how the legal, real-world version would operate, who would access it, and whether the benefits observed in trials would translate to broader populations.
A fresh report by Osmind, one of the clinics providing the treatment, represent the first systematic look at real-world data emerging from Oregon’s legal psilocybin program under Measure 109, offering insights into demographics, motivations, safety, and self-reported mental health changes in participants.
Interested in learning more about psychedelic medicine? APPLY NOW to join PSYCH Symposium: London 2025, on December 4 at Conway Hall.
Who Is Accessing Psilocybin Services?
From the “Real-World Evidence” report, data were gathered between March 2024 and April 2025 at a licensed service center in Central Oregon. Of 311 applicants, 88 individuals completed the baseline survey and became part of the analytic sample.
Key demographic and background characteristics include:
- Median age was 47 years; 62% female; 77% Caucasian; 63% holding a four-year college degree or more.
- 16 % were veterans; around 59% employed; 30% reported household income over $100K.
- Prior experience: about 50% had used psychedelics before; about 50% were currently in counseling or therapy.
In terms of mental health, 61% identified depression as a primary concern, followed by anxiety (42%) and acute stress (24%).
Many had complex, treatment-resistant histories and turned to psilocybin services after exhausting conventional options. Open-ended responses showed motivations spanning healing trauma, grief processing, managing obsessive or self-critical thoughts, and general desire for psychological insight or transformation.
This profile suggests that early adopters of Oregon’s program tend to be relatively educated, somewhat advantaged socioeconomically, and motivated by persistent mental health difficulties, not casual or recreational users. It also underscores gaps in diversity and access that future iterations of the program may need to address.
Outcomes, Safety & Changes in Mental Health Measures
The “Real-World Outcomes” report analyzed metrics across depression, anxiety, and subjective well-being using standardized tests to measure previous conditions and psychological state after the treatment in at a licensed service center.
The findings were:
- Depression (using the PHQ-8 scale): Mean reduction of 4.6 points, corresponding to a shift from moderate to mild severity
- Anxiety (using the GAD-7 scale): Mean reduction of 4.8 points — a change exceeding commonly used clinical significance thresholds
- Well-being (using the WHO-5 scale): Increase of 10.7 points, which is consistent with clinically meaningful improvement in mood and quality of life.
In terms of safety, there were no reportable serious adverse events in the 30-day follow-up period.
However, about 3% of participants reported lingering negative effects (e.g. transient anxiety, existential distress, difficulties with family dynamics) at day 30.
These results mirror the direction of clinical trial evidence: meaningful decreases in depression and anxiety, and gains in well-being, but now observed in a legally regulated, real-world setting.
The Value of Real-World Evidence
These Osmind studies are groundbreaking because they offer the first empirical window into how a legalized psilocybin service model is functioning in practice.
Clinical trials, while essential, often operate under narrow inclusion criteria, intensive controls, and short timeframes. They may not capture the full heterogeneity of “real-world” users, variations in implementation, or longer-term safety signals.
By contrast, these reports show how ordinary people (beyond trial populations) are using psilocybin services, what their motivations are, who they tend to be, and how their mental health measures shift in naturalistic settings. The absence of serious adverse events (in the short term) and the alignment of benefits with trial findings lend credibility to the possibility that psilocybin therapy could scale responsibly under regulation.
Furthermore, the data highlight access and equity issues (e.g. limited racial/ethnic diversity, relatively high socioeconomic status) that policymakers, providers, and regulators will need to contend with. As more jurisdictions consider legalizing or regulating psychedelics, having real-world evidence is critical for designing best practices, safety protocols, reimbursement models, and oversight.
These early reports thus help close the gap between controlled trials and population-level rollout, and that alone makes them a major milestone in the evolving field of psychedelic medicine.
Picture by Photo by Timur Weber on Pexels.