Biotech company Emyria trials MDMA therapy with first responders as industry scrambles to market


Emma White’s life is splintered between anxiety-riddled days, sleepless nights, and fragments of anguish from memories of late-night emergency call-outs.

WARNING: This story contains references to self-harm.

“Slowly, the jobs that you go to wear down on you until it comes to a point,” the paramedic said.

Emma White has developed PTSD after years as a paramedic, and is looking to psychedelic therapy for help.(ABC News: Cason Ho)

“I all of a sudden stopped sleeping, became really anxious all the time, really hypervigilant.”

After a decade on the front line, Ms White realised she needed to address her trauma when she started having thoughts about taking her own life.

“I used to go to a lot of suicides where I’d see the absolute heartache and trauma that families go to, and then somehow I ended up heading down that path myself,” she said.

Therapy and medication have helped, but Ms White said progress had plateaued and she had developed treatment resistant post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD).

Now she is considering what she believes is her final bastion of hope — MDMA, also known as ecstasy, or molly.

Australia leading the psychedelic frontier

Australia is the first country in the world to approve the use of psychedelics to treat some mental health conditions, with very strict conditions.



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