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Hannah Douglass

Centre for Psychedelic Research, Division of Psychiatry, Department of Brain Science, Imperial College of London, UK.

8 papers in the library · 201 citations · publishing 2021-2025

Papers

Psychedelics and health behaviour change

Journal of Psychopharmacology May 29, 2021 Pedro J. Teixeira, Matthew W. Johnson, Christopher Timmermann et al. 87 citations

Healthy behaviors like diet, exercise, and not smoking greatly reduce risks for cancer, diabetes, and cardiovascular disease, but lifestyle diseases remain a major burden. Psychedelic substances, particularly psilocybin, are being explored as tools to promote positive lifestyle change. Psilocybin has low toxicity, is non-addictive, and has shown favorable changes in patients with depression, anxiety, and substance misuse. The article describes proposed mechanisms of action and research linking psychedelics to health behavior change, suggesting that combining psychedelic experiences with methods like Cognitive Behaviour Therapy and Motivational Interviewing may help improve diet, exercise, nature exposure, and mindfulness.

Study Protocol for “Psilocybin as a Treatment for Anorexia Nervosa: A Pilot Study”

Frontiers in Psychiatry October 20, 2021 Meg J. Spriggs, Hannah Douglass, Rebecca J. Park et al. 78 citations

Anorexia nervosa is a severe psychiatric condition with few approved treatments. This paper describes how individuals with lived experience of anorexia nervosa helped shape a pilot study of psilocybin-assisted therapy through two online focus groups involving eleven people, and presents the protocol for that study at Imperial College London. Twenty female participants aged 21–65 with a body mass index of 15 kg/m² or above will receive three oral doses of psilocybin (up to 25 mg) over six weeks, supported by psychological preparation and integration, with a 12-month remote follow-up.

Neuroplasticity and psychedelics: A comprehensive examination of classic and non-classic compounds in pre and clinical models

Neuroscience & Biobehavioral Reviews April 4, 2025 Claudio Agnorelli, Kate Godfrey, Gabriela Sawicka et al. 32 citations

Classic psychedelics (LSD, psilocybin, N,N-DMT) and non-classic psychedelics (ketamine, MDMA) enhance neuroplasticity—the nervous system's ability to adapt—through molecular, structural, and functional changes. Animal studies indicate these drugs induce meta-plasticity (heightened sensitivity to environmental stimuli) and hyper-plasticity (re-opening developmental windows for long-term structural changes), with implications for mood and behavior. Translating these findings to humans faces challenges due to limitations in current imaging techniques, but promising new directions include novel PET radioligands, non-invasive brain stimulation, and multimodal approaches. This review informs the development of targeted interventions for neuropsychiatric disorders.

Neuroplasticity and Psychedelics: a comprehensive examination of classic and non-classic compounds in pre and clinical models

arXiv (Cornell University) November 29, 2024 Claudio Agnorelli, Meg J. Spriggs, Kate Godfrey et al. 2 citations

Classic psychedelics (LSD, psilocybin, N,N-DMT) and non-classic psychedelics (ketamine, MDMA) enhance neuroplasticity, the nervous system's ability to adapt. Animal studies indicate these drugs induce meta-plasticity, heightening sensitivity to environmental stimuli, and hyper-plasticity, reopening developmental windows for long-term structural changes that affect mood and behavior. Translating these findings to humans is challenged by limitations in current imaging techniques, but emerging approaches like novel PET radioligands, non-invasive brain stimulation, and multimodal methods offer promising directions. This review informs development of targeted interventions for neuropsychiatric disorders and advances understanding of psychedelics' therapeutic potential.

Psychedelics and Health Behavior Change - Journal of Psychopharmacology (in press)

March 24, 2021 Pedro J. Teixeira, Matthew W. Johnson, Christopher Timmermann et al. 1 citation preprint

Unhealthy behaviors like poor diet, inactivity, and smoking are major contributors to cancer, diabetes, and cardiovascular disease, causing substantial suffering and public health costs. Interventions to promote healthy behaviors increasingly draw on psychobiological models. This article explores the potential of psilocybin, a psychedelic with low toxicity and no addictive properties, to assist positive lifestyle change. Psilocybin has shown favorable effects in patients with depression, anxiety, and substance misuse, conditions marked by rigid behavioral patterns. The authors describe proposed mechanisms and research findings linking psychedelics to health behavior change, noting that therapeutic models combining psychedelic experiences with methods like Cognitive Behavior Therapy and Motivational Interviewing are already being tested for addiction and eating disorders. They suggest this research may extend to promoting diet, exercise, nature exposure, and mindfulness.

Human brain changes after first psilocybin use

October 14, 2024 Terence J. Lyons, Merle Spriggs, Leevi Kerkelä et al. preprint

A single high dose of psilocybin (25 mg) produced lasting functional and anatomical brain changes in healthy, psychedelic-naive adults, detected from one hour to one month later. Diffusion imaging showed decreased axial diffusivity in prefrontal-subcortical tracts, correlating with reduced brain network modularity, which in turn correlated with improved well-being. Increased cortical signal entropy shortly after dosing predicted better psychological well-being at one month, with next-day psychological insight mediating this relationship. No such effects occurred with a 1 mg placebo dose. Cognitive flexibility, psychological insight, and well-being also increased at one month.

Neuroplasticity and Psychedelics: a comprehensive examination of classic and non-classic compounds in pre and clinical models

arXiv Preprint Archive November 29, 2024 Claudio Agnorelli, Meg Spriggs, Kate Godfrey et al.

Psychedelics like LSD and psilocybin can rewire brain connections after just one dose, unlike traditional psychiatric medications. These compounds boost the brain's natural plasticity, helping neurons form new pathways and adapt to change. Studies show they create a window of enhanced learning and adaptation, leading to lasting improvements in mood and behavior.