Psychedelic-Assisted End-of-Life Care Will Become Standard of Care Before Recreational Legalization
This infographic contrasts standard palliative care with psilocybin-assisted therapy, illustrating how psilocybin dramatically reduces existential distress and improves quality of life in terminally ill patients.
Psilocybin for existential distress in terminal cancer patients produced the most dramatic results in psychedelic research: 80% showed clinically significant decreases in anxiety and depression at 6-month follow-up, with 60% showing complete remission of existential distress (Griffiths et al., 2016, Journal of Psychopharmacology; Ross et al., 2016, Journal of Psychopharmacology).
Dying patients have nothing to lose. The ethical calculus is straightforward. The existing palliative care pharmacopeia (opioids, benzodiazepines, antidepressants) manages physical pain but does little for existential suffering. Psilocybin addresses the one thing nothing else can: the terror of non-existence.
Hypothesis: Psilocybin-assisted therapy for existential distress in terminal patients will receive FDA breakthrough therapy designation and eventual approval before any recreational or general psychiatric indication. This will be the beachhead that normalizes psychedelic medicine — starting with the dying, who no one can argue don't deserve relief.
Prediction: Psilocybin will receive FDA approval for existential distress in terminal illness by 2029, becoming the first psychedelic approved for a psychiatric indication and creating a regulatory pathway for subsequent psychiatric approvals.
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