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Psychoactive drugs: From recreation to medication

From NewScientist:

From the relaxing effects of cannabis to the highs of LSD and ecstasy, illegal drugs are not generally associated with the lab bench. Now, for the first time in decades, that is starting to change.

For almost 40 years, mainstream research has shied away from investigating the therapeutic benefits of drugs whose recreational use is prohibited by law. But a better understanding of how these drugs work in animal studies, and the advancement of brain-imaging techniques, has sparked a swathe of new research. What's more, clinical trials of MDMA (ecstasy), LSD and other psychoactive drugs are starting to yield some positive results. This could lead to a call for governments to take a new approach to the funding and regulation of research into the potential benefits of such chemicals.

Posted By jamesk at 2010-09-03 12:20:45 permalink | comments
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Nowhere Girl. : 2010-09-04 04:25:51
By the way - something that really makes me mad is that modern classification of drugs according to whether they are used as medicines too. For psychedelics, the classification is always "never medical". And regardless of what we think about these substances, this is bullshit, it's simply a lie.
TardNarc : 2010-09-03 14:06:26
from link:

"The drug quickly leaked into the general population, which led to an investigation by the US Food and Drug Administration, and in 1970, LSD was classified as a drug of abuse with no medical value. Research into any therapeutic effects stopped."

Didn't the Spring Grove/MPRC research continue into the mid-1970s?

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