Some therapists in Colorado have already taken Fluence courses, Nielson says; even though Fluence isn’t a state-licensed training business here. And while Nielson doesn’t have immediate plans to become one of Colorado’s state-licensed facilitators of psychedelic-assisted therapy, she does hope that the work they’re doing in Oregon has a broader impact on the medicinal psychedelic industry.
“We see this as part of a larger context of social justice work,” Nielson says. “[It’s] paradigm-shifting work with respect to drug policy and the drug war and our societal approach to thinking about drugs and people who choose to use them.”
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