A Toronto-based cannabis company is looking for a rare exemption under federal drug control laws to build a first-of-its-kind laboratory for southwestern Ontario to produce and study psychedelic drugs.
New Leaf Canada announced that within the next two months, it would begin an expansion of its existing 32,000 square-foot cannabis production facility located on a 64-acre farm in rural Norfolk County, southeast of Tillsonburg, Ont.
The laboratory, which will adjoin New Leaf’s existing production facility, would be used to produce psilocybin and psilocin, a hallucinogenic drug found in magic mushrooms that has been illegal for decades in Canada but has recently become an emerging treatment for mental illness and addictions.
The facility, which New Leaf subsidiary Psirenity will run, would be used to develop mushroom strains, new methods for extracting the drugs and eventually conduct clinical trials, according to Psirenity CEO Chris McCullogh.
Psychedelic research an emerging field
“We’ll be working with psilocybin and psilocin,” he said. “The belief in the science and the early indicators are that psilocybin can help with that increased global brain activity.”
Psychedelic research has become an emerging field in medicine, with scientists looking at psilocybin’s potential to treat a host of disorders ranging from anxiety and depression to obsessive-compulsive disorder and post-traumatic stress disorder, even easing the fear of an imminent death.
Recently, the federal government has also begun loosening laws around the drugs. Health Canada gave four exemptions to palliative care patients to use the drug for end-of-life psychotherapy last August.
Since then, other exemptions have been given to patients who want to use magic mushrooms and therapists who want to develop new treatments using the drugs.
Right now, only a a handful of health practioners in Canada offer therapy using the drugs and currently, there are no approved therapeutic products containing psilocybin in Canada.
McCullogh said through its research, Psirenity hopes to one day change that by studying the potential health and wellness applications of micro-dosing, the practice of taking tiny hits of psychedelic drugs to improve mental wellbeing that’s growing in popularity but remains unstudied and largely unproven.
“This is something that doesn’t have any psychotropic effect. The dosage is very low. It’s something you can take and go about your day and go to work, so it’s not something that creates hallucinogenic effects.”
Users who take minute doses of hallucinogenic drugs say it can improve mood and relieve anxiety and has gained a large following on some social media websites.
Microdosing ‘really promising’ but ‘still a…
Read more:Southwestern Ontario lab seeks rare permission to make, study psychedelic drugs | CBC