Magic mushrooms

New Study Shows Microdosing Psychedelic Mushrooms May Enhance Mood and Mental Health

When you hear the word psychedelics, you might imagine people having hallucinations or intense, out-of-control trips. But microdosing, which has become an area of interest in the scientific community, isn’t that. And a new study published in Scientific Reports supports previous research showing that taking small amounts of psychedelic mushrooms might actually help improve mood and mental health.

Microdosing is the practice of taking a dose of psychedelics so small that it has no hallucinogenic effects (via Medical News Today). It usually involves taking just 10% of a regular dose of psilocybin, which is the active ingredient in psychedelic mushrooms. While people have used naturally-occurring hallucinogens for thousands of years, they eventually became classified as drugs of abuse with no medical use.

The U.S. 1971 Controlled Substances Act halted previous research, which didn’t pick up again until around 2024 (via Harvard University). Due to this renewed interest, some studies have indicated that microdosing could be a treatment for mental health conditions.

A large study exploring the benefits of microdosing

Magic mushrooms mixed with pills

Up until now, studies have mostly been small and observational. The study published in Scientific Reports that explored the effects of microdosing on mood and mental health is said to be the largest longitudinal study to date on this subject, and also one of the few to include a control group (via Medical News Today).

Researchers followed 953 microdosers for one month, as well as 180 people who didn’t microdose. Participants completed questionnaires and tasks on their mobile devices at the start and end of the study, assessing mood, cognitive function, psychomotor ability, and symptoms of anxiety, depression, and stress. Researchers found that in comparison with those who didn’t microdose, those who did reported improvements in mood and symptoms of anxiety, depression, and stress. Female microdosers experienced greater improvement in depressive symptoms than men, and those over the age of 55 experienced larger improvements in the psychomotor test than non-microdosers.

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The study comes with limitations though. Study authors noted that there may have been some response bias, as participants were self-selected and therefore perhaps felt positively about using psychedelics already (via Scientific Reports). Although there was a control group, there was no placebo group, meaning that the effects reported may have been due to participants expecting positive change rather than pharmaceutical effects of the drug (via Medical News Today).

Lesa O'Leary
Lesa O'Leary

Lesa is a dynamic member of OzHelp’s Service Delivery Team as the Service Delivery Team Leader and Nurse. She has been with OzHelp for five years and believes in leading by example. Lesa has experience in the not-for-profit sector, as well as many roles throughout different industries and sectors, including as a contractor to the Department of Defence. She has expertise in delivering OzHelp’s health and wellbeing programs and engaging with clients in a relaxed and comfortable manner that aligns with the organisation’s vision and objectives.

Lesa has a Certificate 4 in Nursing from Wodonga Tafe, Certificate 4 in Mental Health from Open Colleges, and is currently undertaking a Certificate 4 in Training and Assessment from Tafe NSW. For the past few months Lesa has been an Education and Memberships committee member of the ACT Branch of the National Association of Women in Construction (NAWIC).