Physical Disability and Psychedelic Therapies: An Agenda for Inclusive Research and Practice
Frontiers in Psychiatry – May 25, 2022
Source: OpenAlex
Summary
A critical oversight reveals widespread exclusion of individuals with physical, sensory, and learning disabilities from burgeoning psychedelic therapy trials for psychiatric conditions. This perpetuates structural ableism in medicine, exacerbating mental health burdens. Drawing on scholarship in psychology, experts urge prioritizing disability inclusion, ensuring these drug studies—rooted in chemical synthesis and alkaloids—are accessible. Comprehensive training and accommodations are essential. This approach, vital for complementary medicine, ensures equitable access to potential mental health benefits, challenging systemic barriers in psychiatry.
Abstract
Over the past decade, there has been an increase in the number of clinical trials for psychedelic therapies as treatments for a wide range of psychiatric conditions. We are concerned that research organizations overseeing these trials have neglected the inclusion of individuals with physical and sensory disabilities. We suggest that psychedelic research organizations should prioritize and plan for the inclusion of individuals with physical and sensory disabilities to address the mental health burdens they confront. Not doing so risks reinforcing structural ableism in healthcare: the discriminatory manifestation of lowered expectations toward people with disabilities on the part of medical providers. Drawing on scholarship from disability studies and medical ethics, we offer four recommendations for disability inclusion in research. We recognize particular populations shoulder significant mental health burdens; these populations deserve priority and should be given a range of accommodations. We emphasize the need for extensive disability awareness training for those facilitating psychedelic therapies and encourage psychedelic researchers and therapists to exercise cultural humility toward individuals with physical and sensory disabilities. This article should be the impetus for further scholarship and debate about how psychedelic research and therapies can be made accessible to members of disability communities who might benefit.