Health care professionals fight decision to reject access to psilocybin for training
Canada violated the rights of hundreds of patients awaiting access to psilocybin-assisted psychotherapy when it rejected applications from health-care professionals to consume the restricted drug for training purposes, a lawyer for the workers argued in Federal Court on Tuesday.
Nicholas Pope said there aren’t enough health-care professionals licenced to provide psilocybin-assisted psychotherapy and Health Canada’s decision means patients may have difficulty accessing therapists offering the treatment.
Pope made the arguments as part of a request for a judicial review of Health Canada’s June 2022 decision that denied applications from 96 health-care professionals to possess and consume psilocybin – the psychedelic compound produced by magic mushrooms – as part of training to obtain a licence to prescribe the drug.
The health workers – including doctors, psychologists, clinical counsellors, social workers and nurses – had requested an exemption under the Controlled Drugs and Substances Act.