The World Health Organization Wants to Legalize Sex Work and Drugs

Wednesday, July 23, 2014 | | 0 comments

_______________________________________________

http://io9.com/the-world-health-organization-wants-to-decriminalize-se-1607894662  

The World Health Organization Wants to Legalize Sex Work and Drugs

Annalee Newitz

Today 11:29am

Earlier this month, the World Health Organization (WHO) released guidelines for helping to prevent the spread of HIV in key populations. The group, which also monitors the globe for pandemic outbreaks, says we have to decriminalize sex work and drugs if we want to stop HIV.

HIV can be controlled with medications and safer sex, especially among people in the developed world who can afford treatment. But outside these pockets of privilege, the virus continues to be a health problem of epidemic proportions. Following the principles that many epidemiologists recommend, the WHO seeks to contain the spread of HIV by identifying key populations where it spreads the most quickly. By bringing treatment to these groups, doctors block the main avenues that the virus uses to get into the general human population.

How to stop a pandemic (and how to make it worse)

We already have many of the medicines we need to kill pandemic diseases. But to stop a pandemic…Read more

This new report explains who those key populations are, and offers ways we can stop HIV from spreading among their members. These populations include men who have sex with men, transgendered people, people who use or inject drugs, sex workers, and certain groups of adolescents.

What unites these groups is that their activities are either illegal or heavily stigmatized in many parts of the world. That means that they are unlikely to seek out medical help or advice simply because they don't want to be arrested for being gay or having sex for money. In the case of adolescents, many live in countries where they need parental permission to get birth control or medical care. So they, too, must hide their activities from doctors to avoid being "turned in" to their parents.

When you have populations of people who fear that a trip to the doctor may land them in jail, it makes sense that those populations won't follow medical guidelines about safer sex or clean needles. Either they don't know how to reduce their risks; or if they do, they don't have have access to materials that would allow them to have sex or inject drugs safely.

And that's why the WHO is calling for all countries to decriminalize the behaviors and identities of all these groups so that they can get the health care they need.

Under a section in the report called "decriminalizing the behavior of key populations," the WHO writes:

Supporting the health and well-being of key populations whose sexual behaviours, drug use, gender expression or perceived sexual orientation are currently criminalized may require changing legislation and adopting new policies and protective laws in accordance with international human rights standards. Without protective policies and decriminalization of the behaviour of key populations, barriers to essential health services will remain; many people from key populations may fear that seeking health care will expose them to adverse legal consequences.

Specifically they suggest that all countries immediate decriminalize homosexuality and transgender identities. They also want countries to decriminalize sex work and drugs. Finally, they want countries to allow adolescents to receive reproductive health care without notifying their parents.

Here's how the report puts it:

Countries should work toward developing policies and laws that decriminalize same-sex behaviours.

Countries should work toward developing policies and laws that decriminalize injection and other use of drugs and, thereby, reduce incarceration. Countries should work toward developing policies and laws that decriminalize the use of clean needles and syringes (and that permit NSPs) and that legalize OST for people who are opioid-dependent. Countries should ban compulsory treatment for people who use and/or inject drugs.

Countries should work toward decriminalization of sex work and elimination of the unjust application of non-criminal laws and regulations against sex workers. The police practice of using possession of condoms as evidence of sex work and grounds for arrest should be eliminated.

Countries should work toward developing policies and laws that decriminalize same-sex behaviours and nonconforming gender identities. Countries should work towards legal recognition for transgender people.

Countries are encouraged to examine their current consent policies and consider revising them to reduce age-related barriers to HIV services and to empower providers to act in the best interest of the adolescent. It is recommended that sexual and reproductive health services, including contraceptive information and services, be provided for adolescents without mandatory parental and guardian authorization/notification.

The WHO isn't known for taking controversial stances on social issues. Instead, they are a pragmatic and clear-eyed organization that stands for public health above all else. Though this report sounds radical, it is actually just plain common sense when looked at from a medical perspective.

What the WHO sees are groups of at-risk people who can't get health care because they have been stigmatized for behaviors that do not harm anyone. The solution isn't to crack down on these groups more, because we've already seen that strategy causes HIV to spread — not just to at-risk groups, but beyond them. The at-risk group becomes a vector that harms all of society. So the only sane solution is to decriminalize things like sex work, so that sex workers get proper health care and don't endanger their clients (who in turn endanger their partners, and so on).

The point is that criminalizing sex work and drug use winds up harming everyone. And the WHO is trying to eliminate that harm, but going to the source of the problem.

Read the full study on the WHO's website.

 

poll marijuana - Most Canadians want pot laws relaxed #poll #drugpolicy

Sunday, July 20, 2014 | | 0 comments

 

 

http://www.thestar.com/news/canada/2014/07/16/most_canadians_want_pot_laws_relaxed_poll_show.html

 

Most Canadians want pot laws relaxed, poll shows

Seven out of ten Canadians polled in a survey for the Department of Justice said they support decriminalization or legalization of marijuana.

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In an Ipsos-Reid poll commissioned by the Department of Justice 37.3 per cent said Ottawa should legalize marijuana, while 33.4 per cent said the possession of small amounts should be decriminalized.

By: Alex Boutilier and Tonda MacCharles Ottawa Bureau, Published on Wed Jul 16 2014

OTTAWA—A strong majority of Canadians think the federal government should either legalize marijuana or decriminalize the possession of small amounts, according to a new Department of Justice poll obtained by the Star.

The poll, kept secret by the Conservatives for months, found 70 per cent of respondents believe pot laws should be loosened.

Of the 3,000 respondents, 37.3 per cent said the government should legalize marijuana, while 33.4 per cent said the possession of small amounts should be decriminalized.

Only 13.7 per cent of respondents supported the status quo, while 12 per cent said they believe Ottawa should impose harsher penalties.

The Conservatives have made Liberal Leader Justin Trudeau’s pro-legalization stance a cornerstone of their recent attack ads, suggesting legalizing marijuana would make it the drug more accessible to children. But the poll numbers suggest more Canadians support Trudeau’s stance on marijuana, or the New Democrat Leader Thomas Mulcair’s support for decriminalization, than leaving the laws as is.

The Department of Justice commissioned the $175,000 Ipsos-Reid poll after the Supreme Court’s Bedford decision in December, which struck down certain prostitution laws as unconstitutional. The telephone poll focused almost exclusively on opinions on marijuana laws and prostitution, as did additional focus groups conducted by the pollster in seven cities.

While most respondents to the poll were in favour of loosening possession laws, the focus groups were less sure about the current laws and whether they should be changed.

“There was a great deal of confusion about whether the possession of small amounts of marijuana is a crime, a ticketable offence, or completely legal,” the report, which the Conservatives intended to withhold until the end of July, states.

“Participants often used the two terms ‘legalization’ and ‘decriminalization’ interchangeably and did not demonstrate a clear understanding of the distinction between the two.”

 

do you want to stay on this drug policy list?

Friday, July 18, 2014 | | 0 comments

Hi all,

In response to new federal anti-spam legislation I am now required to ask you if you would like to remain on this drug policy information list.  This list is not intended for any commercial function as I am not selling anything to the recipients of this list. At any point in the future should you wish to be removed from this list just “reply” with the simple requrest “please take me off this list”.

If you would like to remain on this list please “reply” with the statement “please keep me on this drug policy information list”.

Thanks,

Mark Haden

FW: Addict credits hallucinogen ibogaine for saving his life - CBC Newfoundland

Thursday, July 17, 2014 | | 0 comments

Addict credits hallucinogen ibogaine for saving his life

CBC News Posted: Jul 17, 2014 5:49 AM NT Last Updated: Jul 17, 2014 5:49 AM NT

http://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/newfoundland-labrador/addict-credits-hallucinogen-ibogaine-for-saving-his-life-1.2709063

 

 

Some doctors in Newfoundland and Labrador are concerned about the effects of the hallucinogen ibogaine being used as a treatment for addiction, but one man credits the drug with helping him get his life back on track.

 

Earlier this week, CBC News told the story of a St. John's man who's offering ibogaine as a treatment for addicts looking to kick their habits:  http://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/newfoundland-labrador/hallucinogen-being-offered-by-st-john-s-man-to-treat-addiction-1.2706786

 

The drug comes from the iboga plant which is native to West Africa. It causes hallucinations and gives users a high that can last more than 30 hours. It's banned in the United States, and unregulated in Canada.

 

Chad McPherson of Moose Jaw, Sask., said after a lifetime of drug and alcohol abuse, and failed attempts to get sober, he lost control of his life and hit rock bottom before experiencing the ibogaine treatment.

 

"Low self-esteem, low self-worth, limitations of not being able to do things, depression. Externally, financially, I've ended a marriage as a result," he said.

 

"I've got young children. I see them less, my career suffered, I was looking at termination. Pretty much everything that can go bad in a person's life has gone bad. Pretty much everything, except I haven't gone to jail and I haven't died."

'So profoundly real'

 

McPherson said he's attended two different treatment centres in Canada — a 12-step program and a 20-day program — with little or no success.

 

However, he says he finally found a method that helped get him clean and sober at the Iboga House in Costa Rica, one of the few places in the world where treatment with ibogaine is licensed.

 

"I talked to myself as a five-year-old boy. I had undergone some abuse in the past and I made peace with him," said McPherson.

 

"I talked to the spirit of my dead grandmother — she was my guide [and] I asked her questions. When you're under the influence of the medicine, it's so profoundly real."

 

McPherson admits the experience may be hard to believe, and he can't explain what happened to him in Costa Rica, but he knows for certain that he's no longer a drug addict.

 

"I don't suffer from any cravings, I don't fear relapse symptoms. They're just not there anymore."

 

The program cost McPherson $10,000, but he said he wants the federal government to recognize ibogaine therapy here so it can be accessible to all Canadians who are struggling with addictions.

FW: Harm reduction: time to end the war on drugs? #drugpolicy

Monday, July 14, 2014 | | 0 comments

Financial Times
11 July, 2014


Harm reduction: time to end the war on drugs?
By Clive Cookson

Georgia's policy is a striking example of an approach to drug abuse based on
scientific evidence and what's best for public health rather than harsh
criminal justice

Two years ago 24,000 people were in jail in the former Soviet republic of
Georgia. Today the figure is 10,000. The reduction - achieved through an
amnesty and an end to jail sentences for personal drug possession and other
minor offences - is one of the fastest falls in prison population on record,
apart from mass releases in war or revolution.

Archil Talakvadze, Georgia's Deputy Minister of Corrections, speaks of the
change of policy as a striking example - still little known abroad - of an
approach to drug abuse based on scientific evidence and what's best for
public health rather than harsh criminal justice.

"We had a repressive approach that led to one of the world's highest
incarceration rates, prison overcrowding and infections running out of
control," says Talakvadze, who comes from a health background. "Now we think
about 'harm reduction' to balance law enforcement."

The new policy has not led to an increase in crime as some feared, he says.
But it has had a very positive effect on health, including a fall in the
annual prison death rate from 55 per 10,000 prisoners to 25. It has also
helped to tackle the spread of hepatitis C through infected drug-injecting
needles.

Other authorities on drug policy echo Talakvadze's appeal for an end to the
war on drugs. "This is where the gap between what science tells us we should
do and what actually happens on the ground is greatest," says Michel
Kazatchkine, the UN Secretary-General's Special Envoy on HIV/Aids in eastern
Europe and Central Asia.

In March 2016 the UN General Assembly will hold a special session on drugs,
the first for 20 years - and Kazatchkine predicts "big political fights".
"The Secretary-General has called for a very open debate," he says. "I'm
arguing for the prioritisation of health and an end to criminalisation when
people have drugs with no intention to sell."

In the US, where the movement to decriminalise cannabis is growing, the
National Institute on Drug Abuse (Nida) is gathering evidence about its
effects. "We're investing in research into what's happening in Colorado and
Washington [state]," says deputy director Wilson Compton.

American prisons, too, are full of people held for drug offences.
"Addiction is a public health crisis," Compton says. "Exceptionally high
rates of incarceration for drug-related offences have not been implemented
with corresponding increases in addiction treatment."
Photograph: Getty

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Amsterdam - The Netherlands
Tel: +31 20 662 6608 / Fax: +31 20 675 7176 http://www.tni.org/drugs
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Legal marijuana shops in BC: What they might look like #drugpolicy

Friday, July 11, 2014 | | 0 comments

 

 

 

 

 

 

CBC.ca

Legal marijuana shops in BC: What they might look like

CBC.ca

British Columbia could become a testing ground for legal recreational marijuana sales in Canada, if UBC adjunct professor Mark Haden has his way.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Mark haden interview with CBC Rick Cluff and Bill Good CKNW- july 10 2014

Thursday, July 10, 2014 | | 0 comments

http://www.cbc.ca/earlyedition/pastepisodes/

For the CBC interview use this link and then use the time slider to find 2:11:00

 

And for the link to the interview on the bill good show CKNW (july 10 2014)

https://soundcloud.com/cknwnewstalk980/bill-good-show-thu-july-10?in=cknwnewstalk980/sets/the-bill-good-show

 

What Ever Happened to 'Just Say No'? #drugpolicy

| | 0 comments

 

 

What Ever Happened to 'Just Say No'?
Once a juggernaut, the Nancy Reagan-helmed campaign has almost disappeared. But does that mean opposition to marijuana legalization is gone too?
The Atlantic
April 29, 2014

 

 

Why the costly, pointless war on drugs must come to an end #drugpolicy

| | 0 comments

New Statesman (UK)
6 May, 2014

Why the costly, pointless war on drugs must come to an end

A new report from the London School of Economics lays out the case against the counter-productive decades-long attack on recreational drugs.

by John Collins

Quantifying the enormous harms of the "war on drugs" is a near-impossible task. How to begin calculating the health epidemics, the violence associated with illicit markets and tragedy of mass incarceration internationally?

The London School of Economics has attempted to begin counting the costs of the war on drugs in a new report, Ending the Drug Wars: Report of the LSE Expert Group on the Economics of Drug Policy. The report includes a call from some of the world's leading economists, including five Nobel Prize winners, to end the "war on drugs" and experiment with alternative policies.

They write: "It is time to end the 'war on drugs' and massively redirect resources towards effective evidence-based policies underpinned by rigorous economic analysis. The pursuit of a militarised and enforcement-led global 'war on drugs' strategy has produced enormous negative outcomes and collateral damage."

These damages include increases in homicides related to drug markets.
For example, as drug markets swell, so too does violence. The report finds, "[the] increase in the size of illegal drug markets observed between 1994 and 2008 (about 200 percent) explains roughly 25 percent of the current homicide rate in Colombia. This translates into about 3,800 more homicides per year on average that are associated with illegal drug markets and the war on drugs."

Traditionally, the goal has been to utilise law enforcement and even the military to suppress the illicit market, but such strategies have major drawbacks. In Colombia, successful counter-narcotics programs only displaced the market elsewhere, for example shifting criminal gangs - and their associated violence - to Mexico, where the homicide rate increased threefold within a period of just four years.

Even interdiction and drug seizures can have major unintended consequences. The report notes that in Colombia, more efficient interdiction strategies "may account for 21.2 percent and 46 percent of the increase in homicides and drug related homicides, respectively, experienced in the north of Mexico.

This is not to say that there is no place for law enforcement or prohibition in global drug policy. The problem is with the pursuit of a "war on drugs" strategy that fails to recognise the limits of prohibition and results in a severe misallocation of resources towards ineffective and often counterproductive policies. Often these come at the expense of far more effective public health policies.

The implications are clear. There must be a drastic reallaction of focus and resources towards proven public health policies based on access to treatment and harm reduction. Such approaches are not only humane but cost effective. Treatment cost an average $1,583 per person but benefited society at the level of $11,487, a 7:1 ratio. There are even greater returns on harm reduction initiatives like substitution therapies, supervised drug consumption facilities and needle and syringe exchange services.

One study cited in the report found that every dollar invested in opioid dependence treatment programs returned between $4 and $7 in reduced drug-related crime, criminal justice costs and theft. When savings related to health care are included, total savings can exceed costs by a ratio of 12:1.

The report concludes that governments must drastically reallocate resources away from damaging and counterproductive policies based on punitive and enforcement led policies. It also calls for a shift away from a supply-oriented focus in producer and transit countries towards an illicit market impact-reduction focus. This means that states and the international community focus on ensuring population security, economic development and protecting human rights instead of blindly focusing on the quantities of narcotics seized or numbers of people arrested.

Finally, it calls for policymakers to pursue rigorously monitored policy and regulatory experimentation, as is currently underway in Uruguay, and the US states of Washington and Colorado, with cannabis regulation.

The list of Nobel laureates who endorsed the report includes, Professor Kenneth Arrow, Professor Thomas Schelling, Professor Vernon Smith and Professor Oliver Williamson. Other signatories include renowned economists, political scientists and human rights experts such as Professor Paul Collier, Professor Conor Gearty, Professor Danny Rodrik, Professor Jeffrey Sachs.

Signatories also include the LSE's most recent Nobel Laureate Professor Sir Christopher Pissarides, the Deputy Prime Minister of the United Kingdom Nick Clegg, Former US Secretary of State George Shultz, Former President of Poland Aleksander Kwaƛniewski, the Minister of Foreign Affairs for Guatemala Luis Fernando Carrera Castro, the Health and Social Protection Minister of Colombia Alejandro Gaviria Uribe and the Former EU High Representative for Common Foreign and Security Policy, Dr. Javier Solana.

The report will be launched at a live event on May 7 at the London School of Economics, with Guatemala's Minister of Interior, Mauricio López Bonilla. Guatemala's President, Otto Pérez Molina, will be taking the report to the United Nations to directly influence policy discussions. He has been a leading figure in calling for a UN review of the drug control system, which will take place at a special session in 2016.

John Collins is coordinator of the LSE IDEAS International Drug Policy Project.

http://www.newstatesman.com/world-affairs/2014/05/why-costly-pointless-war-drugs-must-come-end

--
Drugs & Democracy Info <drugs@tni.org>
Transnational Institute (TNI)
De Wittenstraat 25 | 1052 AK Amsterdam (The Netherlands) Tel +31-20-6626608 | Fax +31-20-6757176 http://www.tni.org/drugs http://www.druglawreform.info/ http://www.undrugcontrol.info/
Twitter: @DrugLawReform
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War on drugs a global failure, London School of Economics says #drugpolicy

| | 0 comments

 



War on drugs a global failure, London School of Economics says
Influential report says global efforts to fight drugs have failed, and a new approach is needed
CBC News
May 9, 2014

 

A vision for cannabis regulation: a public health approach based on lessons learned from alcohol and tobacco - Now online

| | 0 comments

 

A vision for cannabis

regulation: a public health

approach based on lessons

learned from the regulation

of alcohol and tobacco

Mark Haden, Brian Emerson

 

The paper is now on line at http://www.openmedicine.ca/ .

Or see attached

 

Series of Drug policy reform article in huffington post

| | 0 comments

Part 1:
http://www.huffingtonpost.ca/jean-kavanagh/drugs-marijuana-laws-canada_b_500
2924.html


Part 2:
http://www.huffingtonpost.ca/jean-kavanagh/canada-marijuana-drugs-access_b_5
013688.html


Part 3:
http://www.huffingtonpost.ca/jean-kavanagh/illegal-drugs-canada_b_5019436.ht
ml


Part 4:
http://www.huffingtonpost.ca/jean-kavanagh/canada-drugs-legalization_b_51157
55.html?utm_hp_ref=canada-british-columbia


Part 5:
http://www.huffingtonpost.ca/jean-kavanagh/drug-legalization-bc_b_5171755.ht
ml




https://twitter.com/vamosjean

Prohibition and drugs Press down, pop up - economist #drugpolicy

| | 0 comments

The Economist
May 24th, 2014

Prohibition and drugs
Press down, pop up
http://www.economist.com/news/leaders/21602693-cracking-down-illicit-drugs-m
eans-they-surface-another-form-press-down-pop-up?zid=305&ah=417bd5664dc76da5
d98af4f7a640fd8a


Cracking down on illicit drugs means they surface in another form

BEFORE "Breaking Bad", there was "Miami Vice". The 1980s television show
pitted detectives in white linen suits against drugs traffickers who used
the Caribbean as their point of entry into Florida. The route, at least, is
back in fashion. The proportion of cocaine imports entering the United
States via the islands is rising (see article), as clampdowns in Central
America and Mexico push drugs gangs back to their old haunts.

The revival in Caribbean drugs traffic is just the latest example of the
"balloon effect", in which squashing down on illicit activity in one place
causes it to pop up somewhere else. Colombia's war on drugs in the 1990s and
2000s is another: coca crops moved back to Bolivia and Peru, now the world's
biggest grower; cocaine-processing shifted next door, to Ecuador and
Venezuela; Mexico's drugs gangs grabbed market share. A subsequent bloody
clampdown on Mexican gangs diverted traffickers to Central America:
Honduras became the region's largest entry point for airborne smugglers.
With the shift back to the Caribbean, the trade has come full circle.

The balloon effect also operates among consumers. Cocaine and heroin usage
is dropping in places like the United States and Britain, partly because of
educational campaigns, partly because of falling levels of purity (cocaine
in Europe, for example, is often adulterated with a cattle-worming drug).
But consumption of synthetic drugs like methamphetamine, ketamine and
mephedrone is rising to compensate, in both developing and developed
countries. Seizures of methamphetamines have tripled in Asia in the past
five years. New ways of getting high proliferate faster than the authorities
can keep tabs on. A report from the UN Office on Drugs and Crime says that
348 new psychoactive substances have been reported to the agency, most of
them since 2008 (see article).

Prohibitionist drugs policies do have an effect. Traffickers are being
inconvenienced; prices are raised. But the war on drugs surely aimed higher
than merely altering the stuff people that take and how they get hold of it.
It cannot count as a success if global consumption of illicit substances is
going up, not down.

Worse, the spillovers can be grave. Attacking gangs in one country does not
just increase bloodshed there, it also exports violence abroad.
Seizures of drugs create scarcity further down the supply chain, giving
traffickers a greater incentive to use force. Researchers have estimated
that Colombian interdiction policies may explain as much as half of the
increase in drug-related homicides in Mexico between 2006 and 2010. The
extraordinary homicide rates in Central America-Honduras is the world's most
murder-prone country-partly reflect the influx of narco-traffickers after
Mexico's own crackdown. Once the gangs arrive, they are hard to dislodge
entirely; the side effects, like corruption and extra weapons, outlast them.

Consumer countries suffer, too. No one yet understands the long-term health
effects of the new psychoactive substances that people hoover up, but some
synthetic cannabinoids are clearly more dangerous than farmed marijuana. And
production is more mobile, which means that the violence associated with
supplying drugs is creeping closer to sources of demand.
Meth labs are being discovered in the United States and Europe on a daily
basis.

Circular logic

This newspaper's views on drugs are well known. Legalisation is the best way
to prevent harm to users, and to shove the gangs aside. To work, prohibition
requires an almost impossible sustained level of international co-operation
and resourcing. The drugs war needs a rethink, not endless repeats.




--
Drugs & Democracy Info <drugs@tni.org>
Transnational Institute (TNI)
De Wittenstraat 25 1052 AK
P.O.Box 14656 1001 LD
Amsterdam - The Netherlands
Tel: +31 20 662 6608 / Fax: +31 20 675 7176 http://www.tni.org/drugs


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cannabis and schizophrenia - economist

| | 0 comments

http://www.economist.com/news/science-and-technology/21605870-correlation-not-necessarily-causation-puff-logic

 

Mark Haden

Adjunct Professor UBC School of Population and Public Health

Mark@markhaden.com

 

 

 

mark haden on the Bill Good Show - July 10 2014

| | 0 comments

mark haden interview on the Bill Good Show - July 10 2014

| | 0 comments

do you want to stay on this MAPS Canada list?

Wednesday, July 9, 2014 | | 0 comments

Hi all,

In order to comply with the new federal anti-spam laws I need to ask you all if you would like to be maintained on this MAPS Canada (Multidisciplinary Association for Psychedelic Studies) list.  A simple “yes please keep me on this MAPS list will suffice”

Cheers,

Mark Haden

Adjunct Professor UBC School of Population and Public Health

Mark@markhaden.com

 

 

SCIENCE audio interview on psychedelics article, 8 mins.

Tuesday, July 8, 2014 | | 1 comments

How Magic Mushrooms Really 'Expand the Mind'

Sunday, July 6, 2014 | | 0 comments

http://www.livescience.com/46642-magic-mushrooms-brain-dreaming.html

 

Mark Haden

Adjunct Professor UBC School of Population and Public Health

Mark@markhaden.com