juul

This Week in Psychoactives - 3.20.20

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Cannabis

  • Amid Coronavirus, San Francisco, New York, Deem Marijuana Businesses 'Essential' (NPR)

  • Dutch queue for cannabis as coronavirus closes cafes (FRANCE 24)

  • Cannabis cafes can offer takeaways to head off the return of street dealers (DutchNews.nl)

  • 'The legal stuff is garbage': why Canada's cannabis black market keeps thriving (The Guardian)

  • Colorado Just Issued The First Marijuana Delivery License In The State (Marijuana Moment)

  • Medical Marijuana Doctors Can't Use Telemedicine During Virus Outbreak (Westword)

  • Legalizing Marijuana Increases Housing Prices, Study Finds (Marijuana Moment)

  • CBD Alone Can Treat Depression and Break Drug Addictions, Case Study Shows (MERRY JANE)

  • Connecticut Residents Strongly Support Legalizing Marijuana, Poll Shows (Marijuana Moment)

Magic Mushrooms

  • California Psilocybin Legalization Activists Request Online Signature Gathering Amid Coronavirus (Marijuana Moment)

  • Study Indicates the Magic Mushroom Compound Baeocystin is Not Psychedelic (Psychedelic Science Review)

  • Hawaii Lawmakers Introduce Plan To Study Psychedelic Mushrooms With Goal Of Legalizing Access (Marijuana Moment)

  • Scientists Solve Another Crystal Structure of the Psilocybin Analog Miprocin, 4-HO-MiPT (Psychedelic Science Review)

  • Study Shows Norpsilocin is More Potent Than Psilocin at 5-HT2A (Psychedelic Science Review)

  • A Hockey Player Blamed Shrooms for His Brutal Attack on a Woman. It Worked (VICE)

Ayahuasca

  • What Are the Coronavirus Risks with Ayahuasca Ceremonies? (EntheoNation)

Peyote

  • Native American Churches Request that Peyote Not Be Included in Decriminalization Initiatives (Psymposia)

Opioids

  • Coronavirus Is Leading to Shortages of Fentanyl And Meth (VICE)

Cocaine

  • Fiona Apple quit cocaine after ‘excruciating’ night with Quentin Tarantino (Page Six)

Nicotine

  • JUUL Tricks Its Customers Into Advocating for the Florida Flavor Ban (Vaping360)

  • A Scientist Persuaded Italy to Exempt Vape Shops From COVID-19 Lockdown (Filter)

  • Ireland bans menthol cigarettes and rolling tobacco starting May 20 (Euronews)

  • Young adults don't know what's in nicotine products they vape, study finds (Medical Xpress)

  • Minimum price for tobacco could boost health of poorer people, study suggests (BT)

  • British American Tobacco circumventing ad ban, experts say (The Guardian)

Alcohol

  • States Boost Hospitality Industry With Booze Delivery and Takeout Sales (U.S. News and World Report)

  • So Alcoholics Anonymous Is “Proven” to Work After All? Not So Fast (Filter)

Kratom

  • Kentucky Poison Control Center Officials Call Kratom A Drug of Concern (Kratom Guides)

Kava

Khat

  • Governor Bans Sale of Miraa Over Coronavirus Fears (Kenyans.co.ke)

Miscellaneous

  • Harm Reduction in the Time of Coronavirus (Medium)

  • Baltimore To End Most Drug Prosecutions Amid Coronavirus Outbreak (Marijuana Moment)

  • ‘Business Is Booming’ for Drug Dealers Who Deliver (The Daily Beast)

  • 'Dosed' Review: The Case for Plant-Based Recovery (The New York Times)

  • Myths and Realities About the Decriminalization of Psychedelics in the US (Chacruna)

  • Safe injection sites: Coronavirus underlines why they make sense (New York Daily News)

  • Microdosing or Using Psychedelics? How to Support Academic Research (Medium)

  • Prohibition Partners Releases PSYCH: The Psychedelics as Medicine Report (Prohibition Partners)

Think Wilder is reader-supported. If you enjoyed this week’s update, please consider helping out by becoming a patron, making a one-time donation, or sharing this post with a friend. Thank you for your support.

Disclaimer: "This Week in Psychoactives" does not censor or analyze the news links presented here. The purpose of this column is solely to catalogue how psychedelics are presented by the mass media, which includes everything from the latest scientific research to misinformation.

Image by Psychedelic Astronaut.

This Month in Psychoactives - February 2020

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Let’s face the facts. It’s incredibly tough to keep up with psychoactive drug news nowadays.

There’s a ton happening, and this month was certainly no exception. In this blog post I cover the most important news stories from February so that you can stay up-to-date regarding what’s going on without having to spend all of your time tracking down stories and figuring out which ones are actually worth reading.

Here is a slimmed-down video recap version that is available for those who prefer an easier-to-digest option:

Without further ado, let’s get into the news:

First-Ever Thank You Plant Medicine Day

Last week thousands of people all across the globe shared stories on social media expressing gratitude for the important role plant medicines and psychedelic compounds played in helping address a wide range of issues.

This coordinated effort was all part of the first-ever Thank You Plant Medicine Day, which inspired stories of gratitude that were shared on YouTube, Instagram, Twitter, Facebook, Reddit, and Snapchat. This day of gratitude for psychedelics gave people the encouragement they needed to come out of the psychedelic closet online, many for the first time.

I joined in the fun too, producing a YouTube video and blog post discussing how psychedelics have helped heal me from a variety of conditions and catalyze a personal transformation that has resulted in a much different person than I was 15 years ago.

Psychedelic Companies Are About to Go Public

A psychedelic company based in Toronto will soon be listed on a Canadian stock exchange, marking the first time a business in the psychedelic space has gone public.

Mind Medicine Inc. (MindMed) is currently preparing for a Phase 2 clinical trial looking at using ibogaine to treat opioid addiction. The company is aiming to become one of the first publicly listed neuro-pharmaceutical companies developing psychedelics.

Competitors are still weighing their options. London-based company Compass Pathways has not commented on whether its planning a public listing, but Ronan Levy of Field Trip Psychedelics Inc. (also known as Field Trip) is considering a public listing, although both companies might end up getting private funding instead.

Here in the U.S., if any American psychedelic companies decide to go public they would be able to list on the Canadian Securities Exchange even though they aren’t able to do so in their home country.

Federal Vaping Flavor Ban Goes Into Effect

The federal vaping flavor ban went into effect earlier this month, banning all flavors other than menthol and tobacco in an attempt to reduce teenagers’ access to nicotine vapes.

But the reality of the situation is probably not what you’re thinking of when you hear the phrase “federal vaping flavor ban”.

The restriction only applies to one specific category of devices: cartridges or pre-filled pod devices, like the ones made by Juul. The full range of flavors is still available in several other forms though, including refillable vapes, nicotine pouches, and some disposable vaping devices.

Journal Retracts Problematic E-Cigarettes Study

A paper published in a peer-reviewed scientific journal last year was retracted this month after a review identified serious issues with its findings. The study, which was published in the Journal of the American Heart Association, falsely claimed that e-cigarette users were more likely to have had heart attacks.

However, the study’s authors didn’t get things right.

It turns out that the majority of the vapers studied had suffered a heart attack on average a decade before they even started using e-cigarettes. In other words, there isn’t sufficient evidence to conclude that there is a relationship between vaping and heart attacks.

Unfortunately, even though the study was retracted, it’s already done quite a bit of damage to e-cigarettes reputation due to widespread media coverage last year and its unlikely those same media outlets will cover the retraction.

UK Rejects Ketamine Nasal Spray

Back in December the UK granted a license to the nasal spray form of ketamine, known as Spravato or esketamine, for the treatment of severe depression. It looked like treating depression was right around the corner.

But that progress hit a stopping point this month when a UK assessment agency called the National Institute for Health and Care Excellence (NICE) decided against integrating Spravato into the UK health system. NICE expressed concerns over Spravato’s efficacy for treating depression and its cost-effectiveness, claiming there isn’t enough evidence to approve the drug at this time.

The drug’s developer, Johnson and Johnson, may file for an appeal but would need to provide new evidence to support its case in order for Spravato to eventually be incorporated into the UK’s healthcare system.

New Investigation Finds Vaping Lung Injuries Started in 2007

New cases of vaping-associated pulmonary injury, or VAPI, have decreased dramatically this year compared to 2019, but a new investigation found that contrary to popular belief, these issues didn’t actually spring up overnight last year.

In fact, it turns out they actually date back all the way to 2007.

I was right about one thing over the course of the VAPI epidemic last year—these lung injuries can be caused by more than just vitamin E acetate. The investigation found that toxic pesticides, metals, solvents, oils, and heated byproducts also led to injuries.

However, a lot of people (myself included) were wrong about something else—VAPI isn’t exclusively related to THC after all. But that doesn’t change the fact that the vast majority of cases last year involved illicit THC vape cartridges, not nicotine e-cigarettes or weed vapes sold by legally regulated shops in states that have legalized cannabis. This investigation also found that unregulated cartridges containing nicotine, CBD, or other drugs like DMT or kratom can also cause lung injuries.

We need federal regulations for vaping products now more than ever, but it turns out that problems with vaping stretch back even further than some of us previously thought.

Washington DC Psychedelic Decriminalization Ballot Measure Advances

A measure to decriminalize psychedelics in Washington, D.C. advanced this month when the Board of Elections approved the initiative’s ballot language.

Similar to other cities that have decriminalized psychedelics within the last year, the D.C. measure would not change the laws that currently ban psychedelics. Instead, it would make enforcing those laws among the lowest priorities for law enforcement and request that the attorney general and federal prosecutor stop prosecuting people for these offenses.

Marijuana Reforms Advance in Several Places

Cannabis reform efforts made a ton of progress in February. When it comes to legalizing marijuana at the state level, New Hampshire and Vermont advanced legalization bills and Ohio filed a legalization measure for the November ballot.

Medical marijuana bills in Kentucky and Alabama moved forward and lawmakers in Virginia lawmakers approved a bill to decriminalize cannabis possession in the state.

Other countries are warming up to the idea of legalizing cannabis too, with Croatia, Luxembourg, and Israel thinking about relaxing their laws. We’re still waiting on Mexico to finalize its legalization framework though.

But not all reform efforts were successful—New Mexico, Mississippi, and Arizona ran into roadblocks that may prevent the states from moving forward with legalizing recreational or medical marijuana.

Denver Holds World’s First Psilocybin Policy Review Panel Meeting

The city that started the wave of psychedelic decriminalization in America held its first psilocybin mushroom policy review panel meeting to discuss how things have been going since the fungi were decriminalized last year.

Denver’s district attorney and a sheriff deputy met with Kevin Matthews, the man behind the decriminalization movement, in front of an audience of tie-dye wearing people who came out to watch. Sara Gael Giron, a harm reduction advocate from Boulder, also served on the panel.

By all accounts it seems like things are going well so far. The first task is to figure out reporting criteria for local law enforcement agencies regarding psilocybin mushrooms, which must be done by March 31. The panel will also be responsible for presenting a report to Denver City Council a year from now on the effects of decriminalization.

Who would’ve thought that decriminalizing one of the safest psychoactive substances around would have gone so smoothly? (Well… I did, as did most psychonauts, I’d imagine.)

Will Boulder Be the Next City to Decriminalize Psilocybin Mushrooms?

And Denver might not be the only city to decriminalize psilocybin mushrooms in Colorado. It looks like advocates in Boulder are pushing for it too.

However, this reform effort would go one step further by taking the Decriminalize Nature approach that Oakland and Santa Cruz employed to decriminalize multiple psychedelic plants and fungi all at once.

New Drug Testing Techniques Can Detect MDMA and Cocaine Use

Drug testing technology continues to evolve at a rapid pace. Scientists unveiled a technique that involves using speech pattern technology to detect whether you’re under the influence of MDMA. It may sound farfetched, but is it really that much crazier than using thermal cameras at raves to find people in the crowd who are high?

And a new fingerprint test is capable of determining the difference between someone who has actually taken cocaine vs. someone who has just touched it.

It’s amazing to see all the ingenuity that goes into drug testing tech, but I can’t help but feel like that energy could be better spent on more worthy endeavors.

Philly’s Supervised Injection Site Gets Final Approval From Federal Judge

Harm reductionists in Philadelphia have a lot to celebrate this month, as a long battle to open the nation’s first legal supervised injection site finally received approval from a federal judge. Safehouse was hoping to open its doors next week but after intense opposition announced it will hold more community meetings before proceeding.

Wearable Microdosing Technology Patented

In an unexpected turn of events, the patent for a new personalized perfume technology included a section on wearable microdoses that could be consumed via spraying a scent into the air from a device like a watch. The concept was based on Philip K Dick’s sci-fi book Ubik.

Will wearable microdoses ever make it to market? Will they even work? Does it even matter in the first place? I don’t know.

Case Report Covers Extreme LSD Overdoses

An astounding paper co-authored by Mark Haden, the executive director of MAPS Canada, looked at three case reports featuring extremely large doses of LSD. Unexpected health benefits came out of these psychedelic trips, including mental health improvements, pain reduction, and an easing of opioid withdrawal symptoms. One woman accidentally consumed 500ug (5 times more than a normal dose) during her first trimester of an unknown pregnancy and the baby turned out just fine.

But the case that takes the cake belongs to a woman who accidentally mistook LSD for cocaine and snorted a whopping 55mg of LSD. That’s 550 times more than a normal dose—a completely insane amount.

All of the subjects survived and experienced bizarre health benefits.

Man Regains Sense of Smell with Psilocybin

One of the stand-out stories from Thank You Plant Medicine Day involved a man who regained his sense of smell—lost after a severe car crash two years prior—following the use of psilocybin mushrooms.

These magical fungi must be effective at treating many more issues that we know of at this time, but as more people come out of the psychedelic closet and share their experiences with the world we will continue to learn of their true potential.

Think Wilder is reader-supported. If you enjoyed this month’s update, please consider helping out by becoming a patron, making a one-time donation, or sharing this post with a friend. Thank you for your support.

Image by Psychedelic Astronaut.

This Week in Psychoactives - 2.28.20

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Cannabis

  • Marijuana use is rising sharply among seniors over 65, study says, and there are serious risks (CNN)

  • Bill To Legalize Marijuana Sales Officially Passes Vermont House Of Representatives (Marijuana Moment)

  • Mexican Senate Committees Meeting This Week To Finalize Marijuana Legalization Plan (Marijuana Moment)

  • Luxembourg’s government reportedly weighs plan to legalize recreational marijuana (Marijuana Business Daily)

  • Presidential Candidates Clash Over Marijuana Legalization At Democratic Debate (Marijuana Moment)

  • Cannabis for pain: Does medicating with marijuana increase abuse risk? (Leafly)

  • Israel's Prime Minister To Explore Marijuana Legalization (Reason)

  • Moldy, Yeasty Legal Weed Products Prompt Health Advisory in Nevada (MERRY JANE)

  • Elizabeth Warren Has A New Plan For Legalizing Marijuana (Marijuana Moment)

  • Labor unions flex their muscle in fight with California cannabis industry (Los Angeles Times)

  • Cannabis excellence: LSSU launches new chemistry facility (The Mining Journal)

  • More Than 80% of Denver Teens Don’t Smoke Weed, New Study Says (MERRY JANE)

  • Henderson marijuana dispensary hosts cannabis-based blood drive (KTNV)

  • Ohio Marijuana Legalization Measure To Be Filed For November Ballot This Week (Marijuana Moment)

  • Weed Is Better at Preventing Cavities Than Most Toothpaste Brands, Study Says (MERRY JANE)

  • Mississippi Lawmakers Attempt To ‘Kill’ Medical Marijuana Ballot Initiative With New Strategy (Marijuana Moment)

  • Capitol Confidential: THC bill would kill Arizona’s medical marijuana system (Leafly)

LSD

  • This Is What Happens When You Take 550 Doses of LSD At Once (VICE)

  • Microdosed LSD: Finally A Breakthrough For Alzheimer’s Disease? (Forbes)

Magic Mushrooms

  • Could CBD and Psilocybin Treat Brain Injuries? This University Plans to Find Out (MERRY JANE)

MDMA

  • Israel Makes A Big Move Toward The Acceptance Of MDMA-Assisted Psychotherapy For PTSD (Forbes)

  • Belgian woman dies after taking sip of MDMA-laced wine (The Guardian)

Novel Psychoactive Substances

  • The Unintended Consequences of Prohibitionist Policies - Mephedrone (Drug Science)

Ketamine

Opioids

  • In 2019 speech, Bloomberg mocked Brooklyn father and son who died from heroin as ‘not a good family’ (NY Daily News)

  • Inside the Middlesbrough clinic where heroin users get a 'last chance' (BBC)

  • Teaching Children How to Reverse an Overdose (The New York Times)

  • Mother of dead heroin addict to Chicago Police Department: ‘Enforce the law’ (Chicago Sun-Times)

  • What happens when naloxone expires (KUSA)

  • Enhancing Rates Of Opioid Overdose Education And Naloxone Distribution In Emergency Departments (Health Affairs)

Cocaine

  • The World's Biggest Legal Coca Industry Might Get Shut Down (VICE)

  • Why the FDA Approval Process Is Under Scrutiny Following Approval of ‘Numbrino’, a Cocaine-Based Nasal Spray (Grit Daily)

  • U.S. drug deaths dipped in 2018, but cocaine and meth overdoses rose (Science News)

Methamphetamine

  • Meth Still a Missouri Problem, but Now It Comes From Mexico (The New York Times)

  • DEA labels North Texas a 'meth hub' after spike in drug seizures (WFAA)

Nicotine

  • Inside the Philip Morris campaign to 'normalize' a tobacco device (Reuters)

  • New Juul patent application hints at AI-powered vape to help users quit nicotine (The Verge)

  • House tobacco bill revives talk of nicotine limits (Politico)

  • A New Bill Would Ban The Sale of All Flavored Nicotine Products (Colorado Public Radio)

  • Governor Cuomo pushing ban of flavored nicotine vaping products, restricting ads aimed at youth (INFORMNNY)

Benzodiazepines

  • Understanding the link between nicotine use and misuse of 'benzos' (EurekAlert!)

Alcohol

  • 27,000 Mass. drunken-driving convictions may be tossed out due to faulty breathalyzer machines, lawyer says (The Boston Globe)

  • Alcohol-Linked Deaths Soaring in U.S., Women Hit Hardest (U.S. News and World Report)

  • Chicago Approves Earlier Start for Sunday Alcohol Sales (Eater)

GHB

  • New report shows illicit drug GHB deaths could be prevented (Medical Xpress)

  • Call for 'date rape' drug GHB to be reclassified (BBC)

Kratom

  • Kratom at Risk in Colorado Without Legislation, Activists Say (Westword)

  • Drug Tests Show Kratom Use Doubled in U.S. (Pain News Network)

Kava

  • Utah's Attorney General hosts a kava ceremony in the Capitol (Fox 13 Now)

Miscellaneous

  • Supervised-injection site in Philadelphia gets final green light from federal judge (The Philadelphia Inquirer)

  • South Philadelphia to become site of nation’s first supervised-injection facility next week, organizers say (The Philadelphia Inquirer)

  • DEA agent accused of conspiring with cartel (Associated Press)

  • Europe’s psychedelic science renaissance has started (Interdisciplinary Conference on Psychedelic Research)

  • Beyond Mushrooms: The Mysterious, Magical World of African Plant Medicine (DoubleBlind)

  • Should Breakthrough Psychedelic Research Make Us Question Our Assumptions About Mental Illness? (Psychedelics Today)

  • End-to-end solution in psychedelic therapies establishes Numinus as leader in emerging space (Investing News)

  • Scotland's drug death crisis in six charts (BBC)

  • Psychedelics May Aid in Deprogramming Addiction (Psychedelic Science Review)

  • They Fell In Love Helping Drug Users. But Fear Kept Him From Helping Himself (NPR)

  • Podcast Host Joe Rogan Is Steadily Documenting A Psychedelic Record Of The 21st Century (Forbes)

  • Vans Adds Psychedelic Tie-Dye To Their Iconic Checkerboard Print (Sneaker News)

Think Wilder is reader-supported. If you enjoyed this week’s update, please consider helping out by becoming a patron, making a one-time donation, or sharing this post with a friend. Thank you for your support.

Disclaimer: "This Week in Psychoactives" does not censor or analyze the news links presented here. The purpose of this column is solely to catalogue how psychedelics are presented by the mass media, which includes everything from the latest scientific research to misinformation.

Image by Psychedelic Astronaut.

This Week in Psychoactives - 1.10.20

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Cannabis

  • Scientists Discover Two New Cannabinoids (VICE)

  • Thailand rolls out cannabis clinic based on traditional medicine (Reuters)

  • Most employers in Nevada can no longer utilize pre-employment drug tests for marijuana (KSNV)

  • Federal Marijuana Reform Will Get Another Congressional Hearing Next Week (Marijuana Moment)

  • South Dakota: Adult-Use Marijuana Initiative Certified for 2020 Ballot (NORML)

  • Specialists warn about risks of cannabis edibles (Medical News Today)

  • Don't Panic — Weed Edibles Are Just as Safe as We Thought, Actually (MERRY JANE)

  • CBD for Hallucinogen Persisting Perception Disorder (HPPD) (One World Herald)

  • Marijuana Will Be Legalized in New York, Cuomo Vows (The New York Times)

  • Nova Scotia is nearly out of edibles and other 2.0 products (Leafly)

  • Illinois Dispensaries Ran Out of Weed During First Week of Legal Sales (Reason)

  • More Than Half of Cannabis Tourists Bring Weed Home, New Survey Finds (MERRY JANE)

  • Legal Pot Takes a Bite out of Beer Consumption in Canada (Bloomberg)

  • Federal Reserve Bank Examines Marijuana Industry’s Growth (Marijuana Moment)

  • Mississippi: Medical Cannabis Initiative Certified for 2020 Ballot (NORML)

  • Survey: 26% of young people have driven high or ridden with a high driver (Leafly)

  • Legalizing Medical Marijuana Makes People Have More Sex, Study Shows (Marijuana Moment)

Magic Mushrooms

  • California’s Mushroom Decrim Campaign Cleared to Begin Voter Signature Drive (Filter)

  • Shroom-Therapy Startup Edges Toward FDA Approval (Bloomberg)

  • Dave Chappelle And Aziz Ansari Took Magic Mushrooms To Celebrate Comedy Award (Marijuana Moment)

  • Will Shroom Dispensaries Become a Thing Anytime Soon? (DoubleBlind)

MDMA

Ketamine

  • Trump touted a new antidepressant as a solution for veterans. Only 15 have been treated (STAT)

Opioids

  • Fentanyl deaths on the rise as drug is added to heroin, warns report (The Guardian)

  • Black Americans Were Prescribed Opioids Less Frequently Because Of Racial Bias, New Analysis Shows (WBUR)

  • Nasal spray found to be quickest, easiest way to deliver antidote naloxone for opioid overdose (News-Medical.net)

  • What We Can Learn From a Tiny Baltic Country's Two-Decade Fentanyl Crisis (VICE)

Methamphetamine

  • The rise in meth and cocaine overdoses, explained (Vox)

Caffeine

  • Drinking green tea, rather than black, may help you live longer, new study suggests (CNN)

Nicotine

Benzodiazepines

  • Benzodiazepines: Another Prescription Drug Problem (The Fix)

Alcohol

  • U.S. Alcohol-Related Deaths Have Doubled, Study Says (NPR)

  • 'Sober curiosity': Dry January a wellspring for booze-free beverages (The Washington Times)

  • The real reason midlife women should give up booze: PROFESSOR DAVID NUTT reveals how alcohol increases risk of breast cancer, bad skin and hot flushes (Daily Mail)

GHB

  • GHB: The drug used as a 'rapist's weapon of choice' (BBC)

  • Britain’s “Most Prolific” Rapist Spurs Misguided GHB Crackdown (Filter)

Kratom

  • Kratom, usually made use of as a replacement for many opioids, is currently prohibited in France (OBN)

Miscellaneous

  • Medical University of South Carolina To Launch New Psychedelic Research Center (High Times)

  • Transforming psychedelics into mainstream medicines (STAT)

  • More than 60,000 Mexicans have disappeared amid drug war, officials say (The Washington Post)

  • The 'psychedelics coach' with drug-fuelled career advice (BBC)

  • People are seeing ‘Cats’ while high out of their minds. These are their stories. (The Washington Post)

  • This D.C. Group Wants To Decriminalize Magic Mushrooms And Some Psychedelic Plants (WAMU)

  • Philly’s supervised injection site backers say they won’t delay opening while Justice Dept. appeals (The Philadelphia Inquirer)

  • Addiction Treatment Facilities Fall Badly Short, Shows Federal Study (Filter)

  • People Visiting Safe Injection Sites Are Less Likely To Die Compared To Other Drug Consumers, Study Finds (Marijuana Moment)

  • Presidential Candidate Lincoln Chafee Backs Decriminalizing Drugs (Marijuana Moment)

Think Wilder is reader-supported. If you enjoyed this week’s update, please consider helping out by becoming a patron, making a one-time donation, or sharing this post with a friend. Thank you for your support.

Disclaimer: "This Week in Psychoactives" does not censor or analyze the news links presented here. The purpose of this column is solely to catalogue how psychedelics are presented by the mass media, which includes everything from the latest scientific research to misinformation.

Image by Psychedelic Astronaut.

This Week in Psychoactives - 12.20.19

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CANNABIS

  • Marijuana’s Ten Biggest Victories Of 2019 (Forbes)

  • Illinois cannabis dispensaries open New Year’s Day for adult-use sales (Leafly)

  • New Jersey: Governor Signs Marijuana Expungement Bill into Law (NORML)

  • Italy legalizes 'cannabis light' (The Local)

  • Opioid Prescriptions Down In States With Legal Marijuana, Study Finds (Marijuana Moment)

  • New Jersey Lawmakers Pass Marijuana Referendum to Send to Voters in 2020 (TIME)

  • Kids Aren't Buying Weed From Legal Pot Shops, Study Finds (MERRY JANE)

  • Majority Of Americans Support Marijuana Legalization, Two More New Polls Show (Marijuana Moment)

  • State recalls cannabis vape cartridges tainted with deadly vitamin E acetate (Detroit Metro Times)

  • Survey shows boom in marijuana vaping among school kids (WHDH)

  • Regular Cannabis Use Linked to Changes in Heart Structure, Study Finds (MERRY JANE)

  • EPA Approves Pesticides For Hemp In Time For 2020 Growing Season (Marijuana Moment)

  • Zenabis recalls mislabeled CBD gelcaps that actually contained THC (Leafly)

  • Millions of Americans are driving under the influence of marijuana, CDC says (CNN)

  • Atlanta Will Seal Records for Minor Weed Offenses by February (MERRY JANE)

  • Oklahoma Activists Take First Step To Put Marijuana Legalization On State’s 2020 Ballot (Marijuana Moment)

  • Indiana resists legalization, but it’ll be a hot issue in 2020 state elections (Leafly)

  • Medical Marijuana Legalization Measure Officially Qualifies For South Dakota 2020 Ballot (Marijuana Moment)

  • Elizabeth Warren Files Marijuana Bills For Veterans And Immigrants (Marijuana Moment)

  • Patients rally in Ecuador for legal use of medical cannabis (San Francisco Chronicle)

LSD

  • Microdosing LSD for Alzheimer’s proves safe in early human trial (New Atlas)

  • Paul McCartney Disturbing Teen Drug Claim Revealed (Alternative Nation)

MAGIC MUSHROOMS

  • Andrew Yang Says He’s ‘Very Open’ To Legalizing Magic Mushrooms (The Inquisitr)

  • 'Magic mushroom' ingredient could be used to treat depression, study says (CNN)

  • E. coli Could Produce a Popular Psychedelic for Therapeutic Use (Scientific American)

  • Psilocybin: Four Important Takeaways from a Clinical Trial (Psychology Today)

  • 5 Fast Facts About Magic Mushroom Compounds (Psychedelic Science Review)

MDMA

  • MDMA Is Inches Away From Getting FDA Approval (MERRY JANE)

  • Why MDMA must be reclassified as a Schedule 2 drug (Health Europa)

  • MDMA-assisted couples therapy: How a psychedelic is enhancing intimacy and healing PTSD (The Conversation)

5-MEO-DMT

  • Psychedelic drug 5-MeO-DMT induces rapid changes in inflammatory markers (PsyPost)

  • Psychedelic Toad Makes People More Accepting and Less Depressed, Study Shows (MERRY JANE)

  • Is the Juice Worth the Squeeze: The Impact of Climate Change, Development, and Psychonauts on the Sonoran Desert Toad (Psychedelics Today)

SYNTHETIC CANNABINOIDS

  • More than a dozen children collapse after vaping fake cannabis oil laced with ‘spice’ (The Independent)

  • DEA approves synthetic marijuana for big pharma company against legalization (Stock Daily Dish)

NITROUS OXIDE

  • Doctors issue warning after 'whippits' misuse lands B.C. woman in hospital (CTV News)

KETAMINE

  • Ketamine-like drug for depression gets UK licence (The Guardian)

  • In 2019, a ketamine-based antidepressant raised hopes and concerns (ScienceNews)

OPIOIDS

  • We have a solution for the opioid epidemic. It’s dramatically underused. (Vox)

  • Purdue's Payments to the Sackler Family Grew Amid Scrutiny Over the Opioid Epidemic, Court Filing Shows (TIME)

  • Naloxone Dispensing Sees Major Increase In Last Two Years (Indiana Public Media)

METHAMPHETAMINE

CAFFEINE

  • New insights into anti-obesity mechanisms of caffeine (New Atlas)

NICOTINE

  • Congress Approves Raising Age to 21 for E-Cigarette and Tobacco Sales (The New York Times)

  • Vaping Damages Your Lungs, But Is Still Safer Than Smoking, a Long-Term Study Suggests (TIME)

  • WHO launches new report on global tobacco use trends (World Health Organization)

  • Instagram bans influencers from getting paid to promote vaping and guns (CNBC)

  • Plan to ban tobacco sales to anyone under 21 will hit the military too (Military Times)

  • Addictive nicotine in Juul nearly identical to a Marlboro: study (Reuters)

  • US permits sale of cigarettes with 95% less nicotine (The Seattle Times)

  • Why is Texas throwing high schoolers in jail just for vaping? (Washington Examiner)

BENZODIAZEPINES

ALCOHOL

  • Two standard alcoholic drinks a day no longer safe, health officials say (The Guardian)

  • The sale of alcohol at the University of South Carolina athletic events has been approved (ABC News 4)

  • My Friends Serve Underage Kids Alcohol. Should I Speak Up? (The New York Times)

NOOTROPICS

  • People Tell Us About Using ‘Smart Drugs’ to Max out Their Productivity (VICE)

KRATOM

KANNA

KAVA

  • Kava and anxiety: What science says about the popular plant supplement (Inverse)

  • Increased Import Of Kava For Personal Consumption Allowed Into Australia (Fiji Sun)

  • Welcome to Kava Culture: A Spreading Alternative to Reduce Anxiety (Filter)

DATURA

  • Vet on call: Watch out for datura plant, an animal killer (Daily Nation)

MISCELLANEOUS

  • Drug Prohibition Makes Illegal Drugs Cheaper and More Lethal, New Report Finds (MERRY JANE)

  • On Drug Decriminalization in the United States (Playboy)

  • The Vaping-Related Lung Disease Outbreak May Be Coming to an End (TIME)

  • More Americans Facing Murder Charges in Drug Deaths (Truthdig)

  • Call for pill tests as more than 50% of music festivalgoers say they take drugs (The Guardian)

  • How to Rethink Drug Dealing and Punishment (The Appeal)

  • Why Chronic Microdosing Might Break Your Heart (Chacruna)

  • “The state only detains, beats and kills us”: Testimonies from women who use drugs in Mexico (Talking Drugs)

  • How to Trip Sit (DoubleBlind)

  • Why Doctors Are Turning to Psychedelics to Treat Depression and Addiction (Men's Journal)

  • Could Micro-Dosing Psychedelics Lift Depression? (Psychology Today)

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Disclaimer: "This Week in Psychoactives" does not censor or analyze the news links presented here. The purpose of this column is solely to catalogue how psychedelics are presented by the mass media, which includes everything from the latest scientific research to misinformation.

Image by Psychedelic Astronaut.