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Sonya C. Faber

University of Ottawa

5 papers in the library · 146 citations · publishing 2021-2025

Papers

The Need for Psychedelic-Assisted Therapy in the Black Community and the Burdens of Its Provision

Frontiers in Psychiatry January 20, 2022 Darron T. Smith, Sonya C. Faber, NiCole T. Buchanan et al. 69 citations

Psychedelic medicine is an emerging field that uses substances like MDMA to produce non-ordinary states of consciousness. MDMA is in phase-3 FDA trials for treating PTSD and was designated a breakthrough therapy in 2017 due to its safety and efficacy when combined with manualized therapy. Historical and contemporary racial mistreatment triggers physiological stress responses in Black people, similar to those in anxiety disorders. The paper explores how entheogens in psychedelic-assisted therapy could address negative race-based experiences and promote healing among BIPOC. It also discusses the ethical need for culturally competent providers and for recruiting BIPOC into research and training.

Racial/ethnic differences in prevalence of hallucinogen use by age cohort: Findings from the 2018 National Survey on Drug Use and Health

Journal of Psychedelic Studies July 15, 2021 Zoe W. Jahn, Joel Lopez, Sara de la Salle et al. 36 citations

About 15.9% of the U.S. population over age 12 had used a hallucinogen at least once, and 2.0% had used one in the past year. Lifetime use was most common among non-Hispanic White and multi-racial individuals, while Black/African Americans reported the lowest rates. Past-year use was highest among White and multi-racial groups aged 12–34 and among White individuals aged 35–49. Hispanic individuals showed higher past-year use in the 12–17 age group but lower use in the 26–49 range. Black/African Americans had the lowest past-year use among 12–25 year olds. Adults 50 and older reported the lowest past-year use overall.

Expert Opinion on Psychedelic-Assisted Psychotherapy for People with Psychopathological Psychotic Experiences and Psychotic Disorders

International Journal of Mental Health and Addiction April 1, 2024 Joseph T. Torre, Mehdi Mahammadli, Sonya C. Faber et al. 31 citations

Experts in psychiatry, clinical psychology, and psychedelic research agree that excluding people with personal or family histories of psychosis, bipolar disorder, or similar conditions from psychedelic clinical trials may be justified only when protocols offer minimal psychological support. In interviews with 12 experts, themes derived from interpretative phenomenological analysis indicated that psychedelic-, ketamine-, and MDMA-assisted psychotherapy with high levels of support are not necessarily contraindicated for all such individuals and may benefit some. Factors like specific symptoms, illness duration, severity, therapeutic alliance, trauma's role, and available supports could help predict outcomes. More research is needed to develop a safe protocol for this population.

Expert recommendations for Germany’s integration of psychedelic-assisted therapy

BMC Medical Education October 24, 2024 Susanne Birnkammer, Olga Chernoloz, Sergio R Pérez Rosal et al. 10 citations

As psychedelic-assisted therapy (PAT) advances to phase III trials in the USA, Europe, particularly Germany, must develop professional education and regulatory frameworks to catch up. Australia has already approved MDMA and psilocybin for mental health, Ukraine is exploring MDMA for war-related PTSD, and Switzerland restarted restricted medical use of MDMA and LSD around 2014, establishing precedents for nations where these substances were illicit. Key challenges include practitioner training standards, accessibility, and oversight. The paper outlines ethical considerations, training protocols, and governmental roles for building infrastructure in Germany to support PAT rollout, aiming to influence broader European policy and help Europe reclaim its historical lead in psychiatric innovation.

Standardization of Psilocybin Dosing in a Natural Product–Based Retreat Setting: A Practical Method for Dose Quantification and Adjustment Across Sessions

Research Square November 17, 2025 Sergio R. Perez Rosal, Sonya C. Faber

Natural variation in psilocybin content across mushroom samples makes consistent dosing difficult in research and retreat settings. In an observational report, psilocybin content was chemically analyzed rather than inferred from weight, revealing large variability across samples. Eleven individuals participated in a 7-day psilocybin retreat, receiving two doses of psilocybin-containing mushrooms. Standardization based on measured psilocybin concentration allowed for dose adjustments, including a planned increase of the second dose to approximately twice the first to compensate for known acute tolerance effects. This method provides a model for responsible natural product use in community or retreat settings and can inform future translational research.