Primitive Group Treatment
Psychopathology – January 01, 1978
Source: OpenAlex
Summary
Ayahuasca, a powerful hallucinogen containing harmine, is utilized by witch doctors in the Peruvian jungle for therapeutic group treatments. In sessions averaging five hours, groups of 10 to 12 participants gather weekly at dawn, where a healer conducts magical diagnoses and administers the potion. Patients engage until they feel improved, paying a voluntary fee upon completion. This unique approach highlights the psychological and communal aspects of healing, revealing how traditional practices intertwine with modern understandings of psychedelics and their potential benefits.
Abstract
Although it has been known for many years that hallucinogenic drugs are used by witch doctors in the Peruvian jungles for therapeutic purposes, there have been no descriptions of their use. We studied one type of treatment carried out in groups of about 10 to 12 ‘patients’, where the healer makes a magical diagnosis and provides a potion, usually ayahuasca (active hallucinogenic agent: harmine) which is drunk by the witch doctor, his assistant and the patients. The groups meet once a week in the open air in the jungle, at dawn and for an average of 5 h. The patient attends the weekly sessions until he feels well enough to leave, and only then does he pay a voluntary fee. One of our main tasks was to study the group processes.