CORREA, BERGMAN SECURE VICTORY IN BREAKTHROUGH TREATMENTS FOR VETERANS, SERVICEMEMBERS
WASHINGTON — Today, the U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs announced it will fund a $1.5 million study on MDMA-assisted therapy for PTSD and alcohol use disorder among Veterans. This announcement was made following an August 2nd letter from Representatives Lou Correa (D-CA) and Jack Bergman (R-MI), co-signed by 59 other Members of Congress, in which the lawmakers urged the VA to address the post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) and suicide epidemic among Veterans and Servicemembers. The Representatives had implored the Biden Administration to research and make available new and better treatment options like MDMA-assisted therapy for those Veterans and Servicemembers suffering from the invisible wounds of service.
The study, which will be conducted by VA researchers affiliated with Brown University and Yale University, will be the first VA-funded study for psychedelic-assisted therapy since the 1960s. This announcement came after more than two years of engagement and advocacy by Reps. Correa and Bergman, who co-founded the bipartisan Congressional Psychedelics Advancing Therapies (PATH) Caucus in 2022 to improve lawmakers’ understanding of this rapidly evolving field of research and advocate for safe and efficacious treatments for Veterans suffering from PTSD.
In 2023, their amendment to the VA spending bill – which would direct VA to conduct a large-scale study into MDMA-assisted therapy to treat PTSD – was approved unanimously on the House floor. This effort showed clear Congressional support for further VA research into psychedelics and opened the door for today’s announcement.
“Today’s announcement from the VA is nothing short of monumental,” Correa said. “For years, Rep. Bergman and I have been pushing the Department to research the impact of breakthrough therapies, like psychedelics, on the invisible wounds of our country’s most valiant warriors. And just last year, the House passed our amendment to do so. That’s real progress.”
“These therapies. like MDMA, promise to be one of the largest breakthroughs in mental health treatment in nearly half a century, and show potential to cure our veterans of their invisible wounds. I’m so proud to be in this fight alongside General Bergman,” Correa concluded. “We won’t rest until these potentially life-saving therapies are accessible to all who would benefit from them.”
“This is a huge step in the right direction,” Bergman said. “I applaud the VA for moving the ball forward in this fight to help those who so desperately need these breakthrough therapies. I’ve said it before and I’ll say it again, if psychedelic-assisted therapy can help treat a Servicemember or Veteran’s PTSD or prevent them from taking their own life, then we owe it to them to take an active role in researching these potentially life-saving therapies. I’m grateful for Secretary McDonough’s commitment to this cause and to our Nation’s heroes.”
You can read the full letter from Secretary McDonough HERE.
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