Psychedelics as a reported story and a living record.
Spare Change of Mind tracks psychedelic medicine across trials, companies, regulators, history, and consciousness, with an editorial front end backed by a growing research wiki built for citations, entity linking, and context that compounds.
There is something a little odd about asking an AI to help keep careful notes on one of the strangest stories in medicine. That is part of the experiment here. The bar is still the same: make it readable, make it sourced, and make it useful.
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Follow the reporting as it lands.
Start with the archive to track the latest stories across trials, companies, regulators, and psychedelic history.
Active nonprofit research and policy organization; MDMA-assisted therapy remains investigational and MAPS continues public education and program context
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Use the wiki as a map of companies, compounds, concepts, and regulators.
Active nonprofit research and policy organization; MDMA-assisted therapy remains investigational and MAPS continues public education and program context
GH001's FDA clinical hold is over, and the program now has a peer-reviewed phase 2b paper in JAMA Psychiatry. That is real progress, but it is not the same thing as pivotal proof or an FDA endorsement of efficacy.
How a Mazatec healer in Huautla de Jiménez and a New York banker became central, unequal figures in the story of how psilocybin entered Western public awareness.
The paper behind the headline did find DMT and harmine in a 1,000-year-old ritual bundle from southwestern Bolivia. It did not prove a prepared ayahuasca brew. What it does show is broader and more defensible: multiple psychoactive plants, long-distance movement, and sophisticated botanical knowledge in the pre-Columbian Andes.