Abstract
Abstract.In 1962, Ontario’s Addiction Research Foundation launched the first double-blind randomized controlled trial of LSD therapy as a treatment for alcoholism. The study, which found that LSD was not effective, was heavily criticized by other therapists working with the drug. These critics argued that the Toronto researchers who carried out the study were biased against LSD and used an anti-therapeutic method that was destined to produce negative results. Instead of creating a comfortable and supportive environment, they stressed, the Toronto group restrained patients to a bed in a hospital ward, used an unusually large dose of LSD, and hardly provided any careful therapeutic support. Some even compared this method to a “form of torture.” Historians have paid little attention to the study, mentioning it only as an example of flawed or naïve LSD therapy that contrasted with the more advanced “psychedelic” approach developed in Saskatchewan. In this paper, I take a closer look at the Toronto psychiatrists who carried out the study and created the unique method that was employed. I show that they were actually quite excited about LSD and were more sophisticated in their approach to its use than has been appreciated by historians and critics. In many ways, they had their own brand of LSD expertise that differed from that of the Saskatchewan group. Some of the problems with the ARF study, then, did not stem from negative bias or a lack of competency, but instead resulted from the awkward relationship between LSD therapy and controlled trials.
Publisher
University of Toronto Press Inc. (UTPress)
Reference118 articles.
1. The Efficacy of LSD in the Treatment of Alcoholism
2. H. David Archibald,The Addiction Research Foundation: A Voyage of Discovery(Toronto: ARF Books, 1990), 15; in 1961, the foundation was renamed the Alcoholism and Drug Addiction Research Foundation before becoming the Addiction Research Foundation in 1967. For simplicity, I will follow other historians in using the latter name’s abbreviation, ARF. See
3. A Controlled Study of Lysergide in the Treatment of Alcoholism. I. The Effects on Drinking Behavior
Cited by
1 articles.
订阅此论文施引文献
订阅此论文施引文献,注册后可以免费订阅5篇论文的施引文献,订阅后可以查看论文全部施引文献