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Kristin Arden

Lead Clinician, Mindbloom, New York, NY, USA.

2 papers in the library · 64 citations · publishing 2022-2025

Papers

At-home, sublingual ketamine telehealth is a safe and effective treatment for moderate to severe anxiety and depression: Findings from a large, prospective, open-label effectiveness trial.

Journal of Affective Disorders July 1, 2022 T. D. Hull, Matteo Malgaroli, A. Gazzaley et al. 59 citations

At-home ketamine-assisted therapy with remote monitoring produced rapid and significant improvements in depression and anxiety. Among 1247 patients, 62.8% showed at least 50% improvement on the depression scale and 62.9% on the anxiety scale, with remission rates of 32.6% and 31.3%, respectively. Deterioration was rare (0.9% for depression, 0.6% for anxiety). Three patient subpopulations emerged: those who improved steadily (79.3%), those with delayed improvement (9.3%), and a chronic group (11.4%) who were more likely to report dissociation at the fourth session. Side effects at the second session predicted delayed improvement. Only six patients discontinued early due to side effects or adverse events, indicating that screening and monitoring kept risks low.

Cosmology of belonging: The role of community in the therapeutic use of psychedelics.

Palliative & supportive care January 21, 2025 Caroline Dorsen, Lola Noero, Michelle Knapp et al. 5 citations

Fifteen facilitators of naturalistic psychedelic groups in the United States described community as essential to every aspect of psychedelic work: from motivation to use psychedelics, through the dosing experience, to integrating lessons into daily life. Thematic analysis identified two overarching themes: the arc of healing through community (with subthemes of intention, the group journey experience, and integration) and naturally occurring psychedelic communities as group therapy (with subthemes of belonging, authenticity, corrective experience, trust, and touch). The findings suggest that existing knowledge about therapeutic group processes may help structure and optimize group psychedelic work. More research is needed on group size, composition, substance selection, facilitator training, and community integration. Psychedelic groups may provide benefits that individual work does not.