Skip to content

Exploring associations between connectedness and death anxiety following a psychedelic experience

Noah N. Barr, Briony Larance, Matthew J. Schweickle, Sam G. Moreton

Journal of Psychedelic Studies March 9, 2026 Peer reviewed DOI: 10.1556/2054.2026.00477

Summary

After a significant psychedelic experience, adults reported decreased fear of death and death avoidance, alongside increased connectedness to self, others, and the world. Specifically, greater connectedness to self and others correlated with lower death avoidance. The study involved 106 participants who completed retrospective surveys about their experiences three months before and after using psychedelics. These findings suggest that enhanced connectedness may help reduce death anxiety, particularly when linked to mystical experiences.

Study at a glance

Design retrospective cross-sectional survey
Sample size 106
Population adults who reported meaningful psychedelic experiences
Key finding Increased connectedness to self, others, and the world following a psychedelic experience was associated with reduced fear of death.

Abstract

Abstract Background and aims Increased connectedness has been proposed as one mechanism through which psychedelics might reduce death anxiety. This study examined whether changes in connectedness—across intrapersonal, interpersonal, and transpersonal domains—were associated with changes in death anxiety following a significant psychedelic experience. Methods A retrospective cross-sectional survey was conducted with 106 adults ( M age = 31, SD = 10.25) who reported perceived changes before and after a meaningful psychedelic experience. Participants completed measures of connectedness to self, others, and the world, fear of death, death avoidance, and mystical experience strength, retrospectively reflecting on the three months prior to their experience and the three months after. Results Significant decreases were observed in both fear of death and death avoidance, as well as significant increases in all three subscales of connectedness. Increases in connectedness to self, others, and the world were each associated with reduced fear of death, but only connectedness to self and others were related to lower death avoidance. Mystical experience was positively associated with increases in all three domains of connectedness and lower fear of death but not death avoidance. Conclusions These findings support a relationship between connectedness and death anxiety following a psychedelic experience, both of which were associated with mystical experiences. Prospective and qualitative studies are needed to clarify causality and underlying mechanisms, and to determine whether such changes are psychologically adaptive reflections of acceptance or expressions of denial.

Comments

No comments yet.

Log in to comment