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Systematic Review of the Effect of Psychedelic-Assisted Therapy on Attitudes Toward Death, Life, and Spirituality on Symptoms of Distress, Depression, and/or Anxiety in Patients with Life-Threatening Illness

Thivya Turner, P. Glue

Psychedelic Medicine October 15, 2024 Peer reviewed DOI: 10.1089/psymed.2024.0008 via Semantic Scholar

Summary

This systematic review examined how psychedelic-assisted therapy (PAT) may reduce distress, depression, and anxiety in people with life-threatening illness. Improvements in these symptoms were linked to reduced demoralization and hopelessness, greater death acceptance, enhanced spirituality, and a stronger sense of meaning and optimism toward life. Other attitudes toward life and death showed mixed results. The findings suggest that changes in attitudes toward life, death, and spirituality may be mechanisms through which PAT works, but the authors caution that the evidence is limited and of variable quality.

Study at a glance

Design systematic review
Population patients with life-threatening illness
Key finding Improvements in distress, depression, and anxiety symptoms after psychedelic-assisted therapy were associated with reduced demoralization, reduced hopelessness, improvements in spirituality, greater death acceptance, a greater sense of optimism toward life, and a greater sense of meaningful existence.

Abstract

Background: The underlying mechanism(s) of action of psychedelic-assisted therapy (PAT) to reduce distress, depression, and/or anxiety symptoms in life-threatening illness are poorly understood. It has been postulated that addressing death anxiety, and components of spiritual and existential distress, may be mediating factors. Method: This systematic review describes the current evidence base regarding the impact of PAT on attitudes toward life, death, and spirituality. MEDLINE, Embase, PsychINFO, and PubMed databases were systematically searched for original clinical research articles on PAT for distress, depression, and/or anxiety symptoms in life-threatening illness, with outcome measures related to attitudes toward life, death, and spirituality. The risk of bias was assessed using Joanna Briggs Institute critical appraisal checklists. A descriptive analysis was conducted. Results: A total of 14 articles met the inclusion criteria. Improvements in distress, depression, and/or anxiety symptoms were associated with reduced demoralization, reduced hopelessness, improvements in spirituality, greater death acceptance, a greater sense of optimism toward life, and a greater sense of meaningful existence. Mixed results were found in other attitudes toward life and death. Conclusions: This review identifies several mechanisms by which PAT may improve distress, depression, and/or anxiety symptoms in patients with life-threatening illness, via effects on a range of attitudes toward life, death, and spirituality. Results need to be considered with caution, given the paucity and quality of available data. This review also identifies gaps in the current evidence base for consideration in future research.

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