Feb 20, 2026

Oregon's Psilocybin Program

Oregon made history in November 2020 when voters passed Measure 109, creating the first state-regulated framework for psilocybin services in the United States. This wasn't decriminalization, it was the creation of an entirely new licensed industry, complete with regulatory oversight, training requirements, and consumer protections.

What Measure 109 actually does

Measure 109 directed the Oregon Health Authority (OHA) to build a regulatory system for psilocybin-assisted therapy. The law:

How Oregon's program protects clients

Licensed facilitators

Every facilitator in Oregon must complete a state-approved training program, a minimum of 160 hours covering pharmacology, psychology, ethics, cultural sensitivity, harm reduction, and hands-on practicum. They must pass an examination and maintain their license with continuing education.

This means your facilitator has been trained specifically for this work, evaluated by the state, and held accountable to professional standards.

Tested products

All psilocybin used in licensed service centers must be produced by licensed manufacturers and tested by licensed laboratories. Testing covers:

This eliminates the quality uncertainty that exists with unregulated sources. When you receive psilocybin at Meadow, you know exactly what you're getting and how much.

Standardized forms and documentation

OHA requires a series of standardized forms throughout the client journey. These forms, 14 in total, cover informed consent, health screening, session documentation, and follow-up. They exist to ensure that every client receives consistent information and that every session is properly documented.

At Meadow, we've streamlined the form process through our client portal, so you can complete most paperwork digitally before your appointment. But the substance of what's being captured is mandated by the state for your protection.

What this is not

Oregon's psilocybin program is not:

Why physician-led service centers matter

Oregon's licensing framework sets a floor, not a ceiling. Meadow exceeds regulatory requirements by operating under physician oversight:

Oregon created the framework. Meadow raises the standard within it.

The bigger picture

Oregon's program is being watched closely by other states. Colorado passed a similar measure in 2022. Several other states have legislation in progress. The regulatory model that Oregon built is likely to influence how psilocybin services develop nationwide.

Being part of this program means you're accessing psilocybin through the safest, most accountable pathway available. It also means you're part of a broader shift in how society approaches mental health, one that takes seriously the therapeutic potential of experiences that previous generations outlawed without understanding.

Watch: Dr. Tracy Explains

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