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Published 14:42 23 Mar 2022 GMT
Dr Jennifer Mitchell/Via Youtube[/caption]
On the recent study, Dr Nick Allen, the co-founder of Ksana Health and director of the University of Oregon's Center for Digital Mental Health, told Healthline that: "the most intriguing is that the study is exploring how psychological and drug therapies can work together to be truly synergistic."
Essentially, when MDMA is paired with therapy sessions, the drug helps the treatment "to work more effectively" by opening the patient up more.
[caption id="attachment_324898" align="alignnone" width="2048"]
MDMA would be used alongside therapy sessions/Via UnSplash[/caption]
"This may be because of the way MDMA can expand people's capacity to experience empathy, which is a key component of many psychological therapies. So, both aspects are likely to be necessary components," he added.
Similar experiments are happening more frequently in the UK, like at Kings College London where they found that "MDMA makes people cooperative, but not gullible."
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