Depressive DisordersAnxiety DisordersSchizophreniaInterpersonal Functioning & Social ConnectednessMescaline

Psychedelics and psychotherapy in Canada: Humphry Osmond and Aldous Huxley.

This investigative article highlights how psychedelic-assisted psychotherapy was used and developed in the 1950s, mainly in Canada by Humphry Osmond. It concludes that the relative isolation of the hospital enabled the research/therapy to stay away from conventions and look for collaborators outside psychiatry.

Authors

  • Erika Dyck

Published

History of Psychology
individual Study

Abstract

The decade of the 1950s is well known among historians of psychiatry for the unprecedented shift toward psychopharmacological solutions to mental health problems. More psychiatric medications were introduced than ever before or since. While psychiatric researchers later credited these drugs, in part, for controlling psychotic, depressive, and anxious symptoms-and subsequently for emptying decaying psychiatric institutions throughout the Western world-psychiatrists also produced a number of other theories that relied on a more delicate and nuanced blending of psychotherapy and psychopharmacology. Canadian-based researchers were at the forefront of experiments combining mescaline, LSD, and psychoactive substances later described as “psychedelics.” From a relatively isolated setting on the Canadian prairies, in one of the most notorious mental hospitals in North America, this blending of traditions generated a unique approach. A close look at the correspondence between the psychiatrist Humphry Osmond and his friend, the writer Aldous Huxley, who shared interests in psychoactive substances and their effects on perception, and the stimulation of empathy, gives us an opportunity to explore how they developed their psychedelic approach to therapy in the 1950s. The combination of working in an isolated hospital, far from the main research powers in North America, produced a sense of regional incubation and required Osmond to look for collaborators well beyond his own field of psychiatry.

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Study Details

Cited By (1)

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Lifetime use of psychedelics is associated with better mental health indicators during the COVID-19 pandemic

Cavanna, F., Pallavicini, C., Milano, V. et al. · Journal of Psychedelic Studies (2021)

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