About a decade ago, many media outlets—including WIRED—zeroed in on a weird trend at the intersection of mental health, drug science, and Silicon Valley biohacking: microdosing, or the practice of taking a small amount of a psychedelic drug seeking not full-blown hallucinatory revels but gentler, more stable effects. Typically using psilocybin mushrooms or LSD, the archetypal microdoser sought less melting walls and open-eye kaleidoscopic visuals than boosts in mood and energy, like a gentle spring breeze blowing through the mind.

Anecdotal reports pitched microdosing as a kind of psychedelic Swiss Army knife, providing everything from increased focus to a spiked libido and (perhaps most promisingly) lowered reported levels of depression. It was a miracle for many. Others remained wary. Could 5 percent of a dose of acid really do all that? A new, wide-ranging study by an Australian biopharma company suggests that microdosing’s benefits may indeed be drastically overstated—at least when it comes to addressing symptoms of clinical depression.

A Phase 2B trial of 89 adult patients conducted by Melbourne-based MindBio Therapeutics, investigating the effects of microdosing LSD in the treatment of major depressive disorder, found that the psychedelic was actually outperformed by a placebo. Across an eight-week period, symptoms were gauged using the Montgomery-Åsberg Depression Rating Scale (MADRS), a widely recognized tool for the clinical evaluation of depression.

  • TubularTittyFrog@lemmy.world
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    17 hours ago

    microdosing is not a panacea. nothing is. it’s all hype.

    it might help some people in some situations, sure. gpl-1 drugs are also starting to show their limits now they they are normalized and no longer theoretical holy grails of weight loss. majority of users re-gain weight after the drugs.

    the issue with anything, weight, mental healthy, etc. is that it’s boring hard work and people don’t want to do it. especially in an environment that provides lots of ‘quick fixes’ that promise the reward without the effort.

    the problem with a healthy life is it takes a lot of time to do the things that make you healthy. it takes a lot less time to do the things that make you unhealthy. and a lot of people don’t stick with therapies, lifestyle changes and all that because it’s too much work and the results take a long time to show up often.

    a good cup of coffee boosts me not because of the coffee, because it’s an entire process. it’s a ritual that i make the time for. a lot of drug users it’s also more about the ritual of the drug use than the effects of the drug.

  • XeroxCool@lemmy.world
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    18 hours ago

    The thumbnail is a picture of me, after work, doom scrolling, to deenergized to do anything else. My go-to is coffee as a pick me up. Then, 15 minutes later, the thumbnail is a picture of me, doom scrolling, but now on the toilet. I hate it here