This is… Psychedelic State(s) of America

The Rundown
Excerpt: Legislation, Industry, and the Future of Psilocybin for PTSD
By Dr. Alaina Jaster
From our friends at Lucid News

Source: Lucid News
One of the most widely known psychedelic compounds in the world, psilocybin has been investigated in thousands in clinical trials focused mostly on treatments for depression and anxiety. That changed last month with the FDA’s announcement that it would approve a new proposal to study psilocybin assisted therapy for post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD).
On January 7, 2026 the FDA accepted Compass Pathway’s Investigational New Drug Application for their COMP360 compound with a PTSD indication. Compass Pathways has been investigating COMP360, a synthetic psilocybin formulation, as a possible therapy for treatment resistant depression. With this recent approval, Compass Pathways will now expand their COMP360 drug to a PTSD indication and begin late-stage trials.
“The limited treatment options and the long absence of innovation in PTSD demands bold action,” Dr. Guy Goodwin, chief Medical Officer of Compass Pathways, said. “At Compass Pathways, we are prioritizing a PTSD program that could bring hope to millions of patients and their families. We are pleased that the FDA has accepted our IND application for COMP360 in PTSD, enabling the initiation of a late-stage trial.”
This IND application is in partnership with Radial Health – an organization working to build a national network of clinics to provide access to FDA-approved treatments for mental health conditions. The company works with a variety of medical-device and pharmaceutical companies to understand how these treatments are working in a clinical trial setting and optimize the delivery of these interventions to consumers post-approval.
“Our view is that psychiatry is undergoing this profound shift towards far more rapid acting treatments that include neuromodulation devices and rapid acting medications,” John Capecelatro, co-founder and CEO at Radial Health, said. “As we think about COMP360 and the broader psychedelic medicine pipeline we have a tremendous amount of interventions coming down. Our perspective is that in order to ensure those treatments are available to as broad a number of consumers, as safely and effectively as possible, we have to spend meaningful time upfront. This includes understanding how they’re expected to work in an outpatient setting such that we can build the right specific tooling and care protocols around each of these treatments.”
This Compass Pathways sponsored trial is only one of few clinical trials investigating a version of psilocybin for PTSD. The company’s investigation will be a multicenter, randomized, double-blind, controlled study with an open label extension to assess the efficacy, safety, and tolerability of COMP360 in participants with PTSD. The Compass Pathways trials differ from other psychedelic clinical trials in that they do not have a focus on psychological support or psychedelic-assisted therapy.
There are other studies assessing psilocybin as a possible treatment for PTSD, including one that was recently completed at Johns Hopkins University. This study was also a randomized controlled trial assessing the efficacy and safety of two doses of psilocybin for PTSD with psychological support.
“The results so far are very good and it appears safe,” said Dr. Sandeep Nayak, Assistant Professor at Johns Hopkins University. “In our trial, there has not been a clear added utility of the second dose. I suspect, and this is the basis for a new study we are setting up, that a single dose of psilocybin will be more effective than a single dose of MDMA.”
The Legal Landscape of Psilocybin Decriminalization
As the federal government moves psilocybin research forward, some state initiatives are also seeking to decriminalize the use of psilocybin mushrooms for those with PTSD. Earlier last year in Michigan, House Bill 4686 was introduced by District 14 Rep. Mike McFall (D), specifically to decriminalize psilocybin for those with a post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) diagnosis. This bill, along with many other local initiatives, have been pushing Michigan lawmakers to engage with advocates on decriminalization.
One such organization is the Decriminalize Psilocybin Michigan (DPMI) organization working to promote public education and policy changes through coalition building and creating educational materials at all levels. Currently, DPMI is working experts across the state and the state legislature to provide information on psilocybin that will hopefully inform lawmakers to pass decriminalization measures for more than just a PTSD diagnosis.
“One thing that unites all communities across all spectrums in the United States and even the broader global community is we all have trauma,” Michelle Donaldson, Co-Director of DPMI, said. “A bill like what Representative McFall put out, while it is limiting to PTSD, it’s a foot in the door. If we can prove concepts and dispel fears and stigmas around these medicines, then we can hopefully open up broader access.”
In December last year, lawmakers in Massachusetts voted to advance House Bill 2532, a bill establishing a framework for psilocybin therapy, alongside a new draft of House Bill 2506, a measure designed to legalize the use of psilocybin specifically for veterans, law enforcement officers and qualifying patients. House Bill 2506 was drafted by Graham Moore and Jamie Morey of the advocacy group Mass Healing, in collaboration with Rep. Steven Owens (D).
This group of bills establishes both a medical model for psilocybin therapy and a pathway for decriminalization. House Bill 2506 uses language that is largely missing from other bills, developed by collaborating with researchers to create a set of standards that can be adapted as more evidence is available.
“Uniquely, in terms of legislation across the country,” said Moore, “It’s [House Bill 2506] the only legislation that in statute defines a qualifying condition using objective scientific standards. I worked with a psychiatrist, doctors and pharmacists to do this intelligently and we came up with some disqualifying conditions and the need for diagnosis, and more.”
New Jersey is also following suit taking a standardized approach to psilocybin legislation, but instead of focusing on access, Senate Bill 2283 creates a pilot program strictly based on medicalization. The Psilocybin Behavioral Health Access and Services Act will work with hospital systems and allow psilocybin treatments that strictly follow FDA-guidelines and will report outcomes to lawmakers during a two-year period. This bill will likely allow for alignment with medical products, such as synthesized psilocybin, rather than natural mushroom products.
Why Psilocybin?
While there is a lack of empirical evidence supporting psilocybin-assisted therapy for PTSD, the data for psilocybin in other indications such as depression and anxiety is promising. Since 2018, psilocybin has been granted Breakthrough Therapy Designation for treatment resistant depression (TRD), specifically related to COMP360.
There are many reasons for the legislative momentum behind psilocybin therapies including the natural origins of the fungi, the data supporting other mental health indications, and possibly targeted information either from patient advocates, drug companies, or lobbyists.
The psychedelic field has largely focused on MDMA for treatment of PTSD largely in veteran populations. This is unsurprising given that according to the U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs, 29% of veterans will experience PTSD in their lifetime compared to just 6% of the general population. There has been debate over whether the data supports MDMA-assisted therapy for PTSD and the FDA denied an application for MDMA-assisted therapy from Lykos Therapeutics in 2024. Nevertheless, established clinical trials involving MDMA-assisted therapy for PTSD, supported for years by the MAPS nonprofit organization, established investigations into psychedelics as possible therapies for this condition..
“Politicians are not fully aware of the differences between various psychedelics,” said Dr. Berra Yazar-Klosinski, Founder & CEO at Yazar Lab and former Chief Scientific Officer at for-profit MAPS Public Benefit Corporation which carried the studies of MDMA-assisted therapy forward. “They are the recipient of targeted information from drug companies and patient advocates. However, scientists are not often involved in those conversations so they are not able to provide an assessment of the quality of evidence supporting claims.”
Yazar-Klosinki has first-hand experience in attempting to bring a drug to market. She also criticized the way drug companies communicate indications and scientific research. “Drug companies are communicating potential uses pre-approval and not always following the rules of scientific exchange,” she explained. “This includes the requirement to limit potentially promotional statements that lack balance between benefit-risk and also can overstate the status of the science in favor of raising money in order to actually do the science.”
On the other hand, many have criticized the U.S. drug policies for impeding progress on neurotherapeutic advancement. Psychedelics, including psilocybin, are classified as Schedule I meaning they have no FDA-approved medical value and high potential for abuse. Yet, these substances are increasingly difficult to research under provisions of the Controlled Substances Act. This act requires researchers to obtain specific registration to study these substances and comes with stringent regulations once that registration is obtained.
“You can’t say something has no known medical indication if you can’t test the medical indication because of the barriers of research access,” Victoria Cvitanovic, an attorney at Rudick Law Group who focuses on psychedelics and medical cannabis, said. “It gets massively easier to get data when things are legal or have a pathway to access. I don’t think the scientific community can have a complete answer to these questions in the environment of prohibition that we’re living in.”
PSA Media Partnership Spotlight: Work in Psychedelics
Sunday Jobs Report: February 8th, 2026
✨Work in Psychedelics Presents… the Psychedelic Industry Job Roundup ✨
Sunday’s featured roles:
Roles thoughtfully selected by a licensed natural medicine facilitator.
1️⃣ Multiple Roles - Odyssey
📍 Remote
Webflow Designer / Developer: Own end-to-end web presence, landing page design, and growth-focused Webflow builds shaping how prospective clients encounter regulated psychedelic care services.
Intake Coordinator / Care Coordinator: Lead client exploration calls, intake conversations, care coordination, and booking support for individuals considering professionally guided psychedelic experiences.
2️⃣ Staffing & Scheduling Specialist - IFS Institute
📍 Remote
Operational coordination role to oversee trainer scheduling, staffing logistics, and cross-functional communication supporting delivery of North American Internal Family Systems training programs.
3️⃣ Multiple Roles - Compass Pathways
📍 Various
Senior Talent Acquisition Specialist: Lead full-cycle recruitment for scientific, technical, and commercial roles across U.S. and U.K. teams.
Technical Coordinator, Manufacturing & Supply: Coordinate project activities, documentation, financial tracking, and cross-partner communication supporting manufacturing and supply operations.
Coordinator, People Operations: Manage employee lifecycle administration, HR systems data integrity, onboarding and compliance processes, and cross-functional people operations support across UK and U.S. teams.
4️⃣ Emergency Room Technician, Clinic-Based - Edelica Health
📍 Milwaukee, Wisconsin
Clinical support role to assist IV-based psychiatric and pain treatments through IV placement, patient monitoring, procedural support, and care coordination in a structured outpatient infusion setting. The position emphasizes compassionate patient interaction, safe clinical workflows, and collaboration with multidisciplinary providers.
5️⃣ Educational Nurse Coordinator - Electroconvulsive Therapy Program, University of Michigan
📍 Ann Arbor, Michigan
Registered nurse leadership role to provide specialized clinical care for patients receiving electroconvulsive therapy and ketamine treatment within a major academic medical center. Responsibilities include patient assessment, therapeutic administration and monitoring, staff education, and coordination of clinical programming supporting severe and treatment-resistant psychiatric conditions.
Full role details & applications: workinpsychedelics.com
📩 Questions? [email protected]
Note: All job listings are independently curated and written by Work In Psychedelics. While anyone/everyone is welcome to reference or share with credit and a link back. Automated scraping, wholesale reproduction, or republishing without attribution is discouraged.
All postings relate exclusively to legal job opportunities and educational materials within regulated jurisdictions and are shared for professional development only.
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By Jack Gorsline
Until next time,
The Psychedelic State(s) of America Team

