Abstract
<p>Patients with serious illnesses like advanced cancer often experience existential and psychospiritual distress. Alleviating this form of pain and suffering has proven to be very challenging using conventional treatments. Psilocybin-assisted therapy (PAT) employs the psychoactive effects of psilocybin as a catalyst for a psychotherapeutic process grounded in indigenous traditions and within the context of a therapeutic mindset and environment (“set and setting”). This carefully curated experience of an altered state of consciousness can promote healing and psychospiritual growth independently of the disease trajectory. Current research supports the use of this form of therapy as a safe and effective therapeutic tool for such patients. This narrative case report, based upon and written from the perspective of the treating physician, describes the therapeutic journey of a patient with the fictitious name Martin, as he receives his diagnosis of a terminal illness, engages in PAT, and on to his deathbed. Martin was the first patient in Quebec to receive psilocybin treatment through Canada’s Special Access Program (SAP) and chose to end his life with medical assistance in dying (MAID), both done in the context of homecare and paid for in its entirety by the public healthcare system of Quebec.</p>
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