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tv   The Stream  Al Jazeera  March 6, 2023 10:30pm-11:01pm AST

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moving into what many people would call potentially not yet, but soon it's soft to eugenics in which it's not just what do you want? have a baby, it's what kind of baby do you want to have. and you know, the potential for enhancement is there to be clear. no one at this summit is talking about eugenics. in fact, when a chinese scientist announced, and it's very 4 or 5 years ago that he onto the genetic makeup of embryos in a lab. and then brought them to term is an ounce meant was met with shocks and outrage. i felt like i have nothing to lose out with the end, but very precise editing of genetic code to treat and cure read diseases is making its way from the experimental to the practical will be at currently at enormous cost. the next great challenge is to make it accessible and affordable. one journal al jazeera london printed off you anytime on our website address for that is out here dot com. and watch us by clicking on the live icon out of here dot com.
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ah, and one of the top stories here, roger's era took years opposition alliance is named kim al coolish, dora lu, the head of the republican people's party as its joint candidate to run against president richard. ty adder one in may's election, a 6 party coalition settled on 74 year old kid sharon loo. after much debate over whether his candidacy could cause the alliance to lose the election. he's been the leader of the main opposition party, the c h p since 2010, and his last 3 elections to add one to them cost lou has more from ankara or they were. they have been some disagreements among the opposition party members, especially after friday. the 2nd largest part to lead or metal action i threatened to pull out from the alliance as, as she was suggesting that the candidates would be either is samira kirby memorial
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or anchor amir, mastery or vice. because according to the public balls, and those to me years had a bigger chance to win against roseland bridge, or if they borrowed on that line or they would see that the main opposition leader or has succeeded reuniting. and those parties, again, it's exactly a month since 2 major earthquakes hit southern took here and northwest syria. more than 51000 people have been killed and entire neighborhoods flattened. many a still searching for their loved ones. and in syria, many survivors in the revel control northwest a still waiting for vital aid. ashanna assad government has put restrictions on a distribution. and some rebels have blocked deliveries from government held areas . your searches in bangladesh investigating the cause of a massive fire in a ring, a refugee camp in cox's bazaar. a day off to the fire broke out the ruins,
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still smouldering thousands of people who to already been forced from their homes in me and my buy a military crackdown. i've lost that only shelter. and iran supreme leader says that the poisoning of school girls is an unforgivable crime, but should be punished by death. if deliberate will a 1000 girls have been affected since november. some politicians have blamed attacks on religious groups, opposed to girls education. further attacks reported over the weekend. those top stores do stay with us, the stream is up next. when is he off to that? talk to al jazeera, we ask, what should they not be more oversized, perhaps, of foundations like yours? we listen when it comes to diversification, we don't do it in order to feed gets wrinkled, the rational, none of your sources. we meet with global news makers. i'm talk about the stories that matter on al jazeera.
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welcome to the stream at cyber dean. ketamine therapy is quickly gaining popularity and seen as a life saving option for people suffering from treatment resistant mental health disorders like depression. but in the us, many are raising concerns that increased availability of ketamine is outpacing oversight of the drug. and they say that more research is needed. so today we ask is ketamine therapy, the future of mental health treatment. and of course we want you to join the conversation as always. so be sure to share your thoughts and questions with us on you to ah, joining us to discuss all this from boston, dr. robert meisner, medical director of the ketamine service and mclean hospital in philadelphia, dr. hannah mclean, a physician, psycho analyst and founder of sound mind center and from los angeles journalist for
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tessa latifah, who has documented her own experience with ketamine therapy online as well as in her writing. ok, thank you so much for being with us. such a fascinating topic. i want to start robert by kind of asking you how does ketamine work in this instance and, and why is it so useful for treating depression or is it thanks for having me and, and thank you for your interesting the topic. so we don't know precisely how ketamine works biologically, but we have a reasonable working hypothesis. and the key concept in that hypothesis is something called synoptic genesis. send out to genesis describes the brains ability to essentially create new or novel connections that may not have been there before . so how does this happen? we think it involves something called an, an m d a receptor and, and way through which ketamine antagonizes or prevents that receptor from operating
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as it usually does. that then leads to a cascade or a flow of other messaging molecules which communicate with each other. that leads to more and more what we call quote, down stream effects in the cell. you may have heard things about be d, n f. for example, a very popular object of study right now is well as interleukin in the immune system. there are many 2nd messenger other molecules down stream of this and m d a receptor that ultimately through glutamate to be think in part. yeah. lead to send out to genesis. so i have to say, i, you know, robert of coming from a doctor that was the most absurd layman explanation in a beautiful way. i was still able to follow you. so just for the audience, maybe people who maybe struggle to some of that jargon, i want to share derrick story. this is someone who has some experience with kennedy
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in therapy, echoing a lot of what you say, but just with different words, take a listen. my 1st experience is kind of mean the for all of your emotional trauma and experiences and your ego that writing for yourself. and afterwards it allowed me to come back to all of my experiences actively in that objectively and level them and level myself from their 90 and they're still threatening buffering in my world. and in the world in general, i just have new rules that help me over and get back to a place of connected in love for it says when you hear that, i mean how does that compare to your personal experience with ketamine therapy? i think it's really interesting because it seems that incredibly in therapy there
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are kind of 2 things that are happening. there's the neurological changes, which the doctor just explained. and then there's also these kind of like mental realisations that you're coming to and that secondary. but it's very powerful and that's how it was for me. i definitely felt very forgiving when i was doing how to me. and i felt not only forgiving towards other people, but towards myself. and my own may be mistakes that i had made and it was a sense of peace that was really comforting. and i appreciate using those terms. i know that other people have used them also from the pre interview. i loved robert that you talked about ketamine being a great catalyze or for humility and hearing for tis i say that and i'm curious, dr. hannah, what is this about? is it about generating empathy people? i've described the experience as giving you new perspective. maybe an objective
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perspective on some subjective traumas. what can it be use to treat and, and who should be using it? yes, so i think that's a great question. and again, thanks for having me. it's amazing to be here and thanks for the interest in the subject. as robert said, you know, i think it's important i so i went through neurology, occupational medicine, psycho analytic training, and i now i teach therapist and facilitators how to facilitate how to become facilitators and ketamine, assistant psychotherapy, as well as working with mbm and phyllis. i've been and when i teach them, i always say here's the brain explanation. and here's the other explanation, which is how i want you to think about it. so the brain is really important and it's important to think about how these like synopsis and the neuro plasticity occurs. but it's also just as important, if not more important in my mind that these substances, whether it's ketamine,
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phyllis, simon, m, d, m a 5 m, d, m p. we have so many things coming down the pike. what they do is they help us get into our difficult, difficult experiences, get into the difficult memories and really process things that we couldn't process . and it's like, it seems so simple and yet it's like, you know, when they say it's like 100 therapy sessions in one session. yes. isn't it, isn't it, is it so? and i can talk about my own experience as well that i was i as i was training to be a cycle analyst. they did 4 times a week for 4 years. psychoanalysis. like so that's that's how you get trained as you receive. and you also have patients. and for me, i had this idea of what my trauma was. i could tell it from like a 3rd party perspective. and i have one of the best, like analysts in philadelphia. he's actually 94 years old and he's trained a lot of the therapist and analysts here and it's like we can get to i, but we couldn't get into it. yeah. and what's our next, maybe or access it or process or?
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yeah, right. there was like i couldn't for, and i wanted to and i was ready and it wasn't, i wasn't ready to get that and i could, through ketamine, assisted psychotherapy and other, psychedelic assisted therapy is the legal ones because you can go to other countries and do legal versions of the things i was able to actually get into it and feel it and cry and process and it's like and then and then and then your, your trauma lifts or your difficulty. and i'm like, you know, there's lots of different types of define and i want and i want to unpack all that i see for to seems like you want to jump in as she was speaking, there are some things maybe echoed with you resonated. yeah, well, so my 1st 2 sessions as ketamine. i actually went with my mom and she came and sat with me because i was very nervous. i was anxious about how i would feel in the drug. and so she came with me and we have a great relationship, but it really felt like just in those couple hours, we felt like we had gotten through therapy for like 4 years together or like it
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just things that i didn't even realize that i wanted to tell her or be able to express. we're suddenly just like there it was really cool. and i'm wondering, i mean we didn't really get to the heart of this question, but who should be considering the therapy? robert? so there are a number of different people who can benefit and there are some folks who were not quite sure if there is an evidence base or that there shortly will be an evidence base for them to benefit. right now the most robust evidence is for folks who struck re suffer from treatment resistant, major depressive disorder and possibly major depressive disorder. there is also quite a bit of evidence for patients who are specifically suffering from suicidal ideation in the context of treatment resistant, major depressive disorder. and i really want to emphasize that one of the reasons why. and by the way, i think of cat mean as the 1st of of much to con,
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really kind of a gatekeeper to, to things that are coming down the road. the reason there is so much interest in this medication in part is because we're in a public health crisis. if you look at the 1st 2 decades of this century, suicide rates globally, or excuse me, in the united states have gone up in the past, approximate to decades by 35 percent, 35 percent. right. and we know that the world health organization has reiterated depression is the leading cause of is the leading cause of ah, let's call it disability morbidity in the world, global. so we're in a public health crisis and we have drugs that tend not to work very quickly and tend to be permutations of each other. said to have something new that's opening up a gateway for other drugs as well. and ask how to me, unless i get
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a look pipeline is exciting. and robert, when you talk about it being a cadillac or for humility, i had a personal experience taking another psychedelic, i'll just be transparent. i was in a legal environment, it was a, it was, i was sca actually and it was very hard for me after that experience. i know they're very different, but it's these same difficulties in trying to find words to encapsulate this feeling of connecting to traumas being able to process things feeling, you know, feeling very sort of humble about your own struggles, if you will. i mean, that's a very general way of putting it, but i'm curious before we get into some of the risks and challenges. robert, why is this humility catalyze? are so important for 2 reasons. not a day goes by where my team and i think are not. and still, but a sense of respect and humility for this emerging mechanism that, that can mean seems to leverage. and that is to say,
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we're often surprised about what's coming out and what's evolving as we better understand it. and it tells us just how much we don't know about this very exciting thing. i think from a subjective perspective, there's a sense of humility. one might feel can be due to any number of things, but in some cases probably has something to do with what we heard a little bit earlier before about the combined effects of snap to jana says in an environment where a patient is allowed to explore. new cognitive or psychologic stances and starting point and see with a new lab. well, i really appreciate you framing it that way because we have a video that we want to share with someone does just that. the people echoing what you say throughout the show, doctor, before we get to that video, i just want to share with you what, what people are thing and youtube, for example, big red thing, or sorry, pop the thing,
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my wife wants to tried for her migraines. nothing else has helped and i'm hoping ketamine treatment will be a miracle. maybe nothing is a miracle, but there have also asking about the side effects. so we'll get to all that. but before we do this is dr. michael, they're born from toronto explaining sort of some of the, the rapid this association that can happen. take a listen when people are under the influence of ketamine. they get this rapid association of your, you know, constant thoughts that they normally have. and over the period of an hour, they get a chance to kind of have an opportunity to take fresh, new perspectives on, you know, a lot of their personal beliefs or routines or whatever it may be. and for people suffering with mental illness that can be very therapeutic to have a fresh perspective on, on their life there. so many people suffering from depression or anxiety who want to try ketamine therapy or just psychedelic therapy. and they, and they want help,
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right? they don't want to go do this in their back yard or underground, where they don't have a medical team in the therapy team to help them. so hannah, that fresh perspective that we have heard from time and time again when talking about coming in therapy. i mean, you've said that the results you've seen have been astounding. and even people who were previously suicidal have felt like, you know, their entire traumas or depression has been lifted. could you just talk us through? what's astounding, you yeah, i like. i like to tell people that i did 15 years of training and in western medicine, and i didn't feel like i had any tools to actually heal people, which is it seems ridiculous and crazy, but the, the, the healing that we're that i'm seeing and that my team is seeing in the clinic and, and i think it's really important to note that we're doing ketamine assisted psychotherapy. it's not like if it's sent to your home, or if it's done as an infusion and not together a psychotherapy,
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it essentially works as a long acting antidepressant. what we're doing is we're really doing therapy we do for our sessions. so this, you're seeing one of our patients who as a marine who had severe trauma, saw his best friend die in front of him when they switched places and he was leading the squad was able to go back and cry and miss and apologize and really feel the feelings of missing his best friend, he lost, but then he also underneath that was able to uncover all these other traumas and difficult feelings. and what we're working on now in therapy is his grief over his loss of his mother. and just like that, he never got degree for, he was in the military, he went home and then had to go back into the field to rock rock like 2 days later . so it's like all these things to get bottled up and you never feel them. and you think you're pushing away, i think you're fine, but actually you don't realize what you could, the life you could be living if you weren't squeezing all the memories back and not processing them. and i think it really, really amazing example as someone who came in to us and had treatment resistant,
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depression and treatment resistance, suicidal ideation for her whole life had been adopted. and her 1st cutting me in session, she actually had a memory of being taken away from her mom, son and build record and had this her 1st 3 years of life. or actually she didn't remember them, but she was remembering, being in the orphanage not really knowing who to turn to and just cried and cried. and had no idea was even part of she'd been in therapy or her life had no idea that it was even part of something she should process. and then the suicidal ideation lifted. so i think it's all really important when in the last clip we watched someone talk about dissociation, and we've heard that word and i think it's really important to know that it's technically categorized as a dissociative. but most people actually report that they, you know, they'll travel into different realms during their journey, but they actually end up feeling more connected with her body, which no one can really explain why that right through. but it may be part of like you travel when you come back and well i have a body. well my body needs rest,
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you know? so it really isn't like, i think we need to, to really just think about that term and not just categorize it as just as one thing, but it actually does anything for people therapeutically? most certainly, and i see robert nodding there, robert, i want to come to you, but before i do, i kinda want to share with our audience. of course, there's a, another aspect all of this. there's a startup culture aspect, if you will, a lot of online prescription. and there's concerns, as we said at the top, about safety, oversight and accountability. i mean, roberts, if you look at my screen here, this is, i think one of the wellness center is that are popping up online, you know, discover the power of psychedelic therapy. here's another one talking about how their program centered in science. and it helps you see transformative results yet another one here, encouraging you to unlock your ability to heal and, and, you know, i think this is great. it encourages people to ask questions to reach out. but what are the maybe concerns about the different ways in which this could be abused and
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the ease with which there is access? now? yes, it's a, it's an extremely important question. so for all the optimum, the cautious optimism and enthusiasm that, at that basic science clinical science and translational clinical research and research levels that there is many of us are quite concerned that there is apt, an absence of adequate oversight, a ah, as ketamine and other molecules and medicines circulate, so my phone rings, you know, several times a month with a disaster story about a situation that evolves somewhere in the country or the world. and a patient suffers catastrophic consequences or may possibly death as a result of either inappropriate procedures, lack of oversight, lack of monitoring, inappropriate dosing or giving the medicine to someone who has contraindications
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and it's critical to realize that and translational pharmacotherapies, this field of translational science and clinical signs, it's very hard without a strong group of collaborators nationally and internationally to establish a precise standard of care. so one of our goals is to always say, what's the evidence base asked, what's the evidence base? show me the data. and then let's create together a reasonable statement of standard of care that is reflective of the evidence and the data, and let's not be fooled or coerced into using it outside of those bounds because that's when dangerous. that's when the danger and i'm mountain match when bad things happen. well, i appreciate that. i also want to share that there are other people in our youtube chat, jamie and in real time setting, for example, like junior academy in a great solution for physical and mental issues,
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but really dangerous when it becomes in the diction. my co reagan. yes, saying ketamine is an interesting concept alongside various other psychedelic substances. all very good in theory, but in practice faces resistance from the medical establishment. i'm curious. i see you're, you're nodding, robert a doctor, hannah, you talked about sort of the disconnect between western medicine and how that inability you felt actually treat people. but what do you make of this comment? this resistance that we see it's, it's or a robert 1st and then we'll come to you dr. ana. but i'm curious specifically, you know, we saw this, you know, oregon. i think in the u. s. context is now able legally to treat a silo. psy been, of course, which is magic mushrooms, but with all the psychedelic, we've seen this pushback. what can you share with us, robert, about that pushback, and is it good? i mean is that, is that gonna help us maybe control potential abuse? yes, the pushback is actually, it's not just important. it's critical. the pushback and my experience, it 1st doesn't follow in east west binary. i would suggest we really deconstruct
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using that language because it just doesn't follow along those lines anymore. fair enough. the the pushback really, i think is about ensuring that there is an evidence base for the protocols that are being used in the community to make sure that patients are safe . that's pushed back that you want to exist, right? you want data driven evidence based care and that data driven evidence based care is it can occur and the research that's needed is happening. what we don't want to have happen is for the unregulated, broader community in which markets incentives. yeah, are extraordinarily powerful, right? to dictate care per an unfortunate money driving care. no, i appreciate you saying that i do wanna just take us to another topic because we have this woman who posted about her experience with ketamine therapy on tick tock
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for tastes. i'm going to come to you after this have a look at this. of course, she's using all those hashtags like ketamine therapy and mental health, but take a look at this. okay, let's talk about ivy ketamine therapy. this treatment as ideal for people with severe anxiety, depression, p, t s d, a dickson. i have treatment resistant anxiety and depression, which means that i've tried literally every single medication and not have worked. so my doctor recommended t. m. s, and i think had a mean that benefits are supposed to be long term or permanent. so i'm really excited to see how they'll stick around long term. but i have noticed amazing changes since i've started these infusions. i highly recommend this treatment to anyone who has been struggling. it is a game changer and it literally saved my life. your reaction to them for tessa? yeah, i just wanted to comment really quickly. what you are saying about the companies that are sending it out and kind of making it easier to get. and i do think there is a conversation to be had about the accessibility of mental health treatment,
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especially in the united states. but as someone who did come to me in a clinical setting, and i could not imagine doing it outside of a clinical setting and not having a doctor there and not having a technician taking my blood pressure. i mean, seriously, like we talk to the doctors how heavily there nodding right now, they're both. i guess you well, i mean, i think you maybe it's, i'm calling me to say, but sometimes it like hits me really hard and i get very, very anxious. and i literally feel like i am not in a good place. i need that professional there. and so sorry, i just wanted to say really quickly, but i think it's really important that the accessibility is widening. but i would never tell someone, even though ketamine has done great things for my mental health, i would say if you can't do it in a clinical setting, it might not be the right time to do it. i don't agree with these companies and how they're doing, and i'm wondering the video video that we shared with you. i mean,
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it also addresses sort of breaking some of the stigma around not just mental health but, but this whole issue. i mean how important is that in dr. hannah, in terms of moving forward? i know for example, and i don't want to just makes too many things here but, but a lot of moving pieces here, for example, a proposal by biden in the new york times here that would ban online prescribing of certain drugs. i would imagine including that ketamine. how important is it that we break the stigma but also keep access available? yeah, i think it's more about like how do we keep safety and keep keep accessibility in mind but not throw safety out the window. i don't think sending cutting me home to people is safe in most circumstances. once in a while we'll do it. 95 percent of our patients are all in office. we do like extended in person treatments, but i think it's really important for for ketamine. there's 4 categories, really easy. there's and there's home laws, hinges, there is in office i, v and fusions that are usually not with therapy,
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and then there's therapy. and then you can have like at home, you can have someone sitting with you so there can be alone. someone sitting with you and fusion and therapy. yeah. and i think it's really important that we're keeping the separate right. and i also think it's really important to keep in mind that i think the facilitators and well trained facilitators are really what's going to make or break this ecosystem. our, our program is actually one in 7 in the whole country. ok, that is well that using that license to train and oregon and i think we really just need to keep an eye on who is sitting with who and how safety is. and then we also need to keep an eye on people like you and other developments of this very fascinating topic, which we will do. i want to thank you. in the meantime, robert hannon for, for being that they tuned the next time, ah, ah,
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in a, in the pool rhinos until i guess with coach to near extinction. now the army enjoys and community groups that brought them back from the break. mm. one on one east investigates on al jazeera, sears for miles, is on the guy with me tonight. i'll just, there is only mobile app, is that the, this is where we dissects analyze. i got to find it out is there is a mobile app available in your favorite top to get that great and tapped on a and you opt out of any needs that you think of it. unflinching questions is war with lawanda,
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imminent rigorous debate. people are dying because of lack of treatment. black lives don't really matter in the police will join me, mark him on hill up front. what al jazeera, smiling through the cold tomorrow and colleagues at the school for people with special needs, wants to pay royce, that meets the rising cost of living and keeps people in the profession. base teachers are making sure bad to mom, so i don't what is clearly a sizable demonstration of industrial action taking in various parts of the economy. calling on the government prepay arises, that meets inflation. if there's no movement on pay, we likely to be seeing more protests, not just from people like tomorrow, but work is in other key professions who enjoy growth support from the public. ah.

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