
Federal court rules Health Canada decision to block experiential psilocybin training was unreasonable
Social Sharing
The Federal Court of Appeal has ruled that Health Canada's refusal to allow exemptions for health-care workers to use psilocybin as part of their experiential training was unreasonable.
Wednesday's decision was the result of an appeal of a 2022 judicial review application in a case involving 96 health-care practitioners who sought an exemption to legally use dried hallucinogenic mushrooms as part of what is known as experiential training.
The initial application for exemption was filed under the name of Jeff Toth, a Nova Scotia nurse practitioner.
Health Canada's refusal of the health-care workers' requests for exemptions has been sent back to Health Minister Marjorie Michel for redetermination.
The mushrooms, commonly called magic mushrooms, contain psychoactive substances that are only legal for use in Canada if an exemption is granted under the Controlled Drugs and Substances Act (CDSA). Such exemptions are reserved for psilocybin-assisted psychotherapy, which involves medically supervised consumption of the substance for the treatment of serious medical conditions including end-of-life distress or treatment-resistant depression.
Late Wednesday, the federal court ruled that Health Canada's reasons for refusing to grant exemptions to the 96 health workers training to administer psilocybin were too arbitrary.
Refusal of exemptions harms patients: advocate
John Gilchrist, communications director for TheraPsil, a Canadian non-profit organization that advocates for legal access to psychedelic therapy, was "elated" with this week's decision, which he called a "very long time coming."
Gilchrist hopes this leads the current health minister to open up access to therapies by training more professionals who can help treat patients with debilitating migraines or depression. He says Health Canada's refusal to grant the exemptions is "harming health-care professionals and, very importantly, patients who are the most vulnerable in Canada."
The Federal Court of Appeal's decision noted that Health Canada changed its position on psilocybin exemptions between 2020 and 2022 with no clear explanation. In 2020, then Health Minister Patty Hajdu granted exemptions to 19 health-care practitioners.
This was reversed in 2022 under Carolyn Bennett, the then minister of mental health and addictions and the associate minister of health.
"Health Canada is not aware of peer-reviewed clinical evidence to demonstrate that health-care professionals need to take a psychedelic drug in order to appreciate what the patient experiences," the ministry is quoted as saying in the federal court decision this week.
But Federal Court of Appeal Justice Douglas Rennie wrote in his decision Wednesday that "nearly identical exemption requests" were granted in one case and denied arbitrarily in the other.
"The Minister can't make such a significant and abrupt shift without explanation," he wrote.
WATCH | Psychotherapist explains what a medical magic mushroom trip will look like:
What a magic mushroom trip will look like for medical participants
1 year ago
Duration 1:32
Health Canada has approved a study with 20 Londoners who suffer from PTSD to experience therapy under the influence of psilocybin, the active ingredient in psychedelic mushrooms. Psychotherapist Jared Dalton will oversee the therapy. He explains how it will work.
Wins will open access to treatments: lawyer
Ottawa lawyer Nicholas Pope says this is the latest in legal wins that will help open up access to psychedelic treatments.
Pope, lawyer for the appellants, said the health-care workers were approved in 2020, then denied based on a lack of scientific evidence of efficacy.
"Health Canada didn't demand that level of evidence in 2020 and now is demanding it," he said.
In May 2024, a Calgary man named Jody Lance who suffers debilitating cluster headaches was the first to win a Federal Court battle forcing Health Canada to reconsider his bid for legal access to psilocybin to treat his extreme pain.
His case was withdrawn after he got approval for an exemption this year.
Requests to access controlled substances in special medical circumstances are filed through Health Canada's Special Access Program (SAP).
Lance's initial application under the SAP to help treat his pain was denied due to lack of research into the efficacy of psilocybin to treat cluster headaches.
Canadians have had limited legal access to psilocybin under the SAP since 2022. Health Canada approved 56 SAP requests in 2022, 106 in 2023 and 85 as of October 2024.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


CTV News
3 hours ago
- CTV News
CTV National News: Speaking traditional language improves health in Indigenous community, study says
CTV National News: Speaking traditional language improves health in Indigenous community, study says Community members are passing on traditional Indigenous language and names to continue cultural connection. CTV News' Allison Bamford reports.


CTV News
6 hours ago
- CTV News
Vancouver now home to fastest PET/CT scanner in Canada
BC Cancer has rolled out a new diagnostic tool that it says is the fastest and most advanced of its kind in Canada. A new cancer screening machine that recently began operating at the BC Cancer Centre in Vancouver is the fastest and most advanced in Canada, according to officials. The Quadra PET/CT scanner is the first of its kind in the country, and it can capture a much larger picture than previous generations and is about 22 times more sensitive. 'It is the equivalent of four PET scanners put together, and essentially the area covers from the head to the pelvis,' said Dr. François Bénard, senior research director at BC Cancer and radiology professor at the University of B.C. 'We can image this entire area of the body in one shot, so you can do things that we could not do before.' In a nutshell, the new scanners give better quality images in less time and requires less radioactive drugs than previous machines, he told CTV News. A PET/CT scanner combines two imaging devices, positron emission technology, which looks at biochemistry, and computed tomography, which provides anatomical information. A PET scan requires an injection of a radioactive substance called a tracer, while a conventional CT scan does not. B.C. is home to three PET/CT machines, in Vancouver, Victoria and Kelowna. Notably, the new Quadra machine is the fastest of its kind, which means more scans can be performed and patients get a more comfortable experience. Bénard says it can take more time to position a patient in the machine than take the picture itself. 'When I started my career, it would take two hours to take a PET scan, now we can get a better PET/CT scan in less than 30 seconds,' he said. Bénard added that those getting a PET scan on an older machine need not worry—they are also very precise. 'If you're not getting a PET scan on that machine you should be reassured. BC Cancer has very modern instruments at other sites,' he said. What this new scanner will do right away is add capacity for more diagnostics and provide research opportunities in the radiopharmaceutical field at UBC, according to Bénard. In May, the BC Cancer Centre in Vancouver also got a state-of-the-art photon-counting CT scanner. With files from CTV News Vancouver's Spencer Harwood


CTV News
10 hours ago
- CTV News
New technology allows menstrual pads to screen for cervical cancer
(CT Murphy has been exploring the use of nanomaterials in menstrual pads to non-invasively detect human papillomavirus (HPV), a leading cause of cervical cancer. Image courtsey: CELLECT Laboratories Inc.) Innovative new technology could soon mean that screening for cervical cancer won't be as uncomfortable as a Pap test, according to two Waterloo, Ont., researchers. CELLECT Laboratories co-founders CT Murphy and Ibukun Elebute have been exploring the use of nanomaterials in menstrual pads to non-invasively detect human papillomavirus (HPV), a leading cause of cervical cancer. Murphy says her first experience with a Pap test prompted her to create this innovation as a final-year project studying nanotechnology at the University of Waterloo (uWaterloo). 'They are one of the most uncomfortable and archaic experiences I've ever had in the medical industry,' Murphy told in a phone interview. 'I was really taken aback with how little pain management there was.' Murphy later partnered with Elebute, a fellow uWaterloo alum with a background in biomedical and mechanical engineering, as well as business, to found CELLECT Laboratories Inc. Ibukun Elebute and CT Murphy. (Ibukun Elebute and CT Murphy. Image courtsey: CELLECT Laboratories Inc.) In the last two years, their nanomaterials research has won over $150,000 in funding at pitch competitions worldwide. 'I think it's been a very recent advent of people actually looking into women's health and realizing what a massive disparity there is,' Murphy said. 'Women are desperate for proper health care that is made for them, by them and that they can trust (…) this technology is not only wanted, but desperately needed.' 'It's clear that we are not building in isolation,' said Elebute. 'We're standing on the shoulders of a growing community that's pushing for real change in women's health, and that makes all the difference.' Cervical cancer screening in Canada Murphy says that modernization could help address low screening rates for cervical cancer – as it's one of the reasons contributing to what the Canadian Cancer Society calls the fastest increasing cancer in women. '(Women's) lives are at stake because of certain social stigmas surrounding one of the main diagnostic techniques for cervical cancer,' Murphy said. 'I think innovating in a way that makes (screening) more inviting and easier to use will mean a genuine improvement in not only quality of life, but the chances of survival for tons of women who are affected by HPV and cervical cancer every single day.' The incidence rate of cervical cancer has risen 3.7 per cent per year since 2015, the first significant increase since 1984 and a 'concerning' trend that a recent Canadian Medical Association Journal report notes is largely preventable. 'Not even optimally using technology' In Canada, several initiatives have already been introduced to address the rise in cervical cancer, including increased awareness of HPV vaccination and a shift to HPV testing rather than Pap or cytology tests. HPV testing requires less frequent screening and targets the high-risk types of HPV that lead to cervical cancer. Ontario, British Columbia, P.E.I. and Northwest Territories have all transitioned from Pap tests to HPV testing, and Quebec is offering the service in some regions, with plans to fully adopt it province-wide. B.C. is the first to offer at-home self-testing covered by the province, an option expected to be available in Ontario and New Brunswick in the future. All other provinces are in various stages of making the switch. Dr. Anna Wilkinson, a family physician and oncologist at The Ottawa Hospital, says the transition has been slow to come, nationally. Despite a decade data showing it to be more effective than cytology, federal screening guidelines recommend against HPV testing. Dr. Wilkinson says those guidelines are 12 years out of date. 'We're not even optimally using technology that's already proven and known,' she told 'Cervical cancer is almost entirely preventable, yet each year in Canada, many women die from it or undergo difficult treatments with lifelong side effects. We must modernize our national guidelines to include HPV vaccination, HPV cervical screening and self-screening, so that cervical cancer can be eradicated in Canada.' Current initiatives don't address all issues While Murphy and Elebute acknowledge the importance of recent modernization initiatives, they say the current self-testing model does not fully address the issues they aim to tackle. HPV testing kits may still trigger the same discomfort and stigma as Pap tests, Murphy notes, especially for survivors of sexual abuse, or those experiencing gender dysphoria. 'The swab simply does not alleviate the correct pain points,' she said. 'We are providing a noninvasive and familiar alternative that will incentivize those who do not seek out Pap smears to get tested for HPV.' That said, abnormal test results may still necessitate more invasive screening, such as a colposcopy or biopsy. 'Depending on what you have or what you want to look for, you might need to have one of those uncomfortable exams,' said Dr. Amanda Selk, an obstetrician gynecologist at Women's College Hospital in Toronto, in an interview. 'If you actually do have a high-risk HPV strain, then you have to have an exam with a speculum where we look at your cervix with a microscope to see if there's any pre-cancer happening there.' Coexisting in the current landscape With their prototype three years into testing and soon to move on to clinical trials, Murphy and Elebute say their intention is not to replace current models, but to coexist alongside existing lab workflows. 'Our goal is to enhance what's already available by making high-quality sample collection more accessible, comfortable and compatible with the realities of people's lives,' Elebute said. 'When we think about the future, we see CELLECT as a powerful complement to existing self-testing tools - expanding access, improving user experience and ultimately helping more people get screened earlier and more reliably.' In addition to screening for HPV and cervical cancer, Elebute says menstrual blood could be used as a diagnostic tool for other female reproductive conditions, transforming women's health care. 'We see different fluids used (in health care): blood, urine, stool; and you begin to wonder why the one thing that we're able to collect pretty much every month is not being used,' Elebute said. 'It's almost like a gold mine that we need to use to catch up on all the years we've fallen behind in women's health.'