World Boxing Council, Wesana Health Partnering To Examine Psychedelics As Potential Treatment For Traumatic Brain Injury

World Boxing Council, Wesana Health Partnering To Examine Psychedelics As Potential Treatment For Traumatic Brain Injury
World Boxing Council, Wesana Health Partnering To Examine Psychedelics As Potential Treatment For Traumatic Brain Injury
Daniel Carcillo by David Kindler is licensed under CC BY 2.0

Since retiring from the National Hockey League in 2015 at age 30, Daniel Carcillo has dedicated his life to helping athletes and other people like himself who have suffered from traumatic brain injury.

Carcillo was diagnosed with seven concussions in his nine professional seasons and struggled at times with slurred speech, headaches, anxiety, depression, insomnia and other side effects of repeated hits to the head. Two years ago, he implemented a lifestyle change that included an improved diet, more sleep and the use of a psychedelic drug called psilocybin, which he says has made him feel better than ever.

Now, through Wesana Health, a company he co-founded last year, Carcillo is looking to help anyone who has been in his shoes. Wesana Health, which is testing the use of a psychedelic to treat anxiety and depression in people with traumatic brain injury, went public on Monday through the listing of its shares on the Canadian Securities Exchange. And today, the company is announcing a partnership with the World Boxing Council that it hopes will provide a better understanding of traumatic brain injury, a condition that has no U.S. Food and Drug Administration-approved treatments, diagnostics or measurements.
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Psychedelics