# Oregon Measure 109 **Type:** State psilocybin regulation **Jurisdiction:** Oregon, USA **Status:** Active (approved 2020, implemented 2023) **Domain:** Psychedelic policy ## Overview Measure 109 is Oregon's voter-approved ballot initiative establishing a state-regulated psilocybin services program. Passed in November 2020, it created the first legal framework in the United States for supervised psilocybin administration for therapeutic purposes outside of clinical trials. ## Regulatory Framework - State licensing of psilocybin service centers - Facilitator training and certification requirements - Minimum protocol requirements for preparation, administration, and integration - No medical diagnosis required for access - Services available to adults 21+ ## Implementation The program became operational in 2023, with licensed service centers beginning to offer psilocybin sessions. Individual centers may exceed minimum regulatory requirements with enhanced screening, preparation, and integration protocols. ## Access and Equity Issues First published outcomes data (Bendable Therapy, 2026) revealed significant demographic disparities: - 87.5% of clients are white - 84.1% have completed higher education - 77.3% earn above $50K annually - 46.6% travel from out of state - Program functions partly as "psilocybin tourism" destination These patterns indicate the program is not reaching underserved populations despite being designed for therapeutic mental health access. ## Clinical Outcomes First naturalistic study (n=88, 30-day follow-up) showed large effect sizes: - Depression: -4.63 points PHQ-8, d=0.90 - Anxiety: -4.85 points GAD-7, d=1.04 - Wellbeing: +10.67 points WHO-5, d=2.14 - Clinically significant HPPD at 30 days: 0% - Lingering negative effects: 3.4% ## Timeline - **2020-11** — Measure 109 approved by Oregon voters - **2023** — Program implementation begins, licensed service centers open - **2024-03** — First prospective outcomes study begins (Bendable Therapy) - **2026-02-18** — First published outcomes study released as medRxiv preprint, revealing both strong clinical effects and significant demographic access disparities