Psychedelics and Psychotherapy: Cognitive-Behavioral Approaches as Default
Frontiers in Psychology May 23, 2022 David B. Yaden, Dylan Earp, Marianna Graziosi et al. 106 citations
The acute effects of psychedelics depend on users' expectations and surroundings (set and setting). Current clinical psychedelic administration draws on indigenous practices, 1960s new age spirituality, psychodynamic approaches, and cognitive-behavioral therapies. Cognitive-behavioral therapies, including acceptance and commitment therapy (ACT), have the strongest rationale for psychedelic-assisted psychotherapy because they avoid cultural insensitivity, make minimal speculative assumptions about the mind and reality, and have the largest empirical support for safety and effectiveness outside psychedelic therapy. Concepts from CBT, DBT, and ACT can usefully inform preparation, session, and integration phases. Evidence-based psychotherapeutic paradigms provide the best starting point for safety and efficacy.