Confluence In the Media

From CNN's reporting to the Carhart-Harris Lab at UCSF to a decade of podcast interviews — a single place to find what's been said, written, and studied about our work.

TEAM FEATURED IN:

Featured story

CNN follows a grandmother's journey at Confluence.

"She called her retreat experience “the beginning of a transformation.”."

The piece follows Martha Stem, a grandmother from Florida in her early 70s, who came to Confluence in the summer of 2025. More than six months later, she describes herself as at peace — traveling again, setting boundaries, starting her mornings with her dogs and a cup of coffee instead of doomscrolling.

The piece also goes broader — researchers, regulators, policymakers, and participants across a range of experiences, some profound, some disappointing. That range feels honest to us.

Research & press releases

Collaborations and announcements

We contribute participant data and operational lessons to peer-reviewed researchers studying psilocybin in real-world settings.

Jan 14, 2026

Carhart-Harris Lab at UCSF and Confluence Retreats collaborate on naturalistic psilocybin research.

Confluence will contribute participant data to the CHL Global Psychedelic Survey, examining how preparation, set & setting, and group support shape outcomes within Oregon's regulated framework.

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Mar 28, 2026

CNN: Inside America's first legal psilocybin retreats.

CNN's investigation features Confluence founder Myles Katz and a participant whose story anchors the piece — alongside researchers and regulators across the field.

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Forthcoming, 2026

Featured in Dr. Robin Carhart-Harris' forthcoming book, How Psychedelics Work.

Myles Katz contributes perspectives from Oregon's first-in-the-nation regulatory system to the book's examination of emerging psychedelic policy models.

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“Oregon’s regulated psilocybin services framework presents a unique opportunity to study psychedelic experiences (…). This collaboration [with Confluence] allows us to learn from community-based use in a careful, systematic way that can meaningfully inform the field.”

— Dr. Robin Carhart-Harris, neuroscientist and Director of the Carhart-Harris Lab at UCSF