Frontiers in Psychology
November 17, 2022
Catharina Messell, Lisa Summer, Lars Ole Bonde et al.
22 citations
A new music program, the Copenhagen Music Program, has been developed to accompany the 4–6 hour sessions of medium/high dose psilocybin therapy. The program uses the Guided Imagery and Music framework to choose and sequence music, and the Taxonomy of Therapeutic Music to rate each piece's psychological intensity. Detailed procedural steps and examples are provided to guide others in creating music programs for psychedelic interventions, with the aim that informed music selection can support therapeutic dynamics during the drug's acute effects.
Journal of Psychopharmacology
February 28, 2025
Dea Siggaard Stenbæk, Emil Deleuran Poulsen, Marie Katrine Klose Nielsen et al.
15 citations
A single 25 mg dose of psilocybin, a psychedelic compound, safely reduced alcohol consumption in ten adults with severe alcohol use disorder. Over 12 weeks, heavy drinking days fell by 37.5 percentage points and drinks per day dropped by 3.4. Participants also reported rapid and lasting decreases in craving and increases in self-efficacy. Peak blood levels of the drug varied widely among individuals, from 14 to 59 µg/L. The open-label, single-group design lacked a placebo control, so larger randomized trials are needed to confirm the findings.
Research Square
August 23, 2024
Mathias E. Jensen, Dea Siggaard Stenbæk, Catharina Messell et al.
1 citation
A single 25 mg dose of psilocybin, given with preparation and integration sessions, reduced alcohol consumption in ten adults with severe alcohol use disorder. Heavy drinking days dropped by 37.5 percentage points over 12 weeks, and drinks per day decreased by 3.4 units. Participants also reported rapid and lasting reductions in craving and increased self-efficacy. Blood levels of the active metabolite psilocin varied widely between individuals, peaking from 14 to 59 µg per liter. The open-label study, which lacked a placebo group, suggests that even a single psilocybin session may be safe and effective, but larger randomized controlled trials are needed.