Frontiers in Psychiatry
September 19, 2023
Hillary Jackson, Sara So, Abigail Yaffe et al.
87 citations
A large prospective survey of adults planning to take psilocybin outside clinical settings found that, on average, participants reported lasting reductions in anxiety, depression, and alcohol misuse, along with improvements in cognitive flexibility, emotion regulation, spiritual wellbeing, and extraversion, and decreases in neuroticism and burnout after use. However, a minority reported persisting negative effects: 11% at 2–4 weeks and 7% at 2–3 months after use, including mood fluctuations and depressive symptoms. The study included 2,833 respondents at baseline, 1,182 at 2–4 weeks, and 657 at 2–3 months post-use. Participants were primarily college-educated White men in the United States, mean age 40, who used dried psilocybin mushrooms (mean dose 3.1 grams) for self-exploration.
Journal of Psychoactive Drugs
May 7, 2024
Sandeep M Nayak, Sydney H White, Samantha N Hilbert et al.
18 citations
A prospective longitudinal study of 657 people planning a psilocybin experience outside a laboratory found that after the experience, participants reported increased perception of minds in various living and non-living entities such as plants and rocks, replicating earlier findings. However, the study found little to no change in participants' metaphysical beliefs, such as dualism, or in their self-reported Atheist-Believer status. These results contrast with cross-sectional studies suggesting psilocybin experiences alter Atheist-Believer status and non-naturalistic beliefs, but they support the relevance of mind perception and mentalization processes.
Journal of affective disorders
February 1, 2025
Grant Jones, Matthew X Lowe, Sandeep Nayak et al.
12 citations
Psilocybin, the psychoactive compound in magic mushrooms, is linked to improved mental wellbeing on average, but few studies examine how effects differ by race. In a large online longitudinal study of 2,833 people planning naturalistic psilocybin use, race/ethnicity moderated changes in spiritual wellbeing, cognitive flexibility, and emotion regulation (expressive suppression) at 2–3 months post-experience, but not at 2–4 weeks. Participants of Color reported minor differences in context and subjective effects, such as being more likely to set an intention before use. Both groups showed comparable reductions in anxiety and depression, with no significant moderation by race.
Journal of Psychoactive Drugs
February 7, 2025
Amy Lehrner, Heather Jackson, David S. Mathai et al.
11 citations
Among 679 adults using psilocybin in naturalistic settings, 68.2% reported acute feelings of shame or guilt during the experience, which were difficult to predict. The ability to constructively work through these feelings predicted wellbeing 2-4 weeks later. On average, psilocybin produced a small but significant decrease in trait shame maintained 2-3 months after use (Cohen's dz = 0.37), though trait shame increased in 29.8% of participants. The activation of self-conscious emotions with psychedelics warrants further attention as a challenging experience subcategory relevant to psychological outcomes, potentially creating a unique learning condition for shame-related memory reconsolidation.
Frontiers in psychiatry
January 1, 2024
Matthew X Lowe, Hannes Kettner, Del R P Jolly et al.
9 citations
Ceremonial ayahuasca use is associated with significant improvements in mental health, well-being, and psychological functioning among Middle Eastern and North African (MENA) immigrants and refugees. In a longitudinal online survey of 15 primarily female participants, reductions in depression, anxiety, and shame were reported, along with increases in cognitive reappraisal and self-compassion. Most participants reported no lasting adverse effects and experienced positive behavioral changes persisting months after ingestion. The findings suggest naturalistic ayahuasca use might hold therapeutic potential for MENA populations exposed to trauma prior to and during migration, though data are preliminary.
June 9, 2023
Sandeep M. Nayak, Sydney White, Samantha Hilbert et al.
1 citation
preprint
A longitudinal study of 657 people planning a psychedelic experience measured changes in beliefs about mind perception, metaphysical positions, and Atheist-Believer status before and after the experience. Replicating prior work, participants showed increased mind perception for living and non-living targets such as plants and animals. However, there was little to no change in metaphysical beliefs like dualism or in Atheist-Believer status. These results contrast with cross-sectional studies suggesting psychedelics alter non-naturalistic beliefs or religious identity, but they support the idea that psychedelics specifically affect how people perceive minds in various entities.
Journal of psychoactive drugs
March 13, 2026
Matthew X Lowe, Quinn A Darby, Sasha Kalcheff-Korn et al.
Sexual and gender minority individuals face high rates of depression, anxiety, trauma, and discrimination but have been underrepresented in psychedelic research. A naturalistic study of a seven-day ayahuasca retreat for SGM participants found significant reductions in depression and anxiety scores and increases in spiritual well-being and quality of life, especially in the first month after the retreat. Participants described the experience as highly meaningful, with many ranking it among the most meaningful events of their lives. Positive behavioral changes included improved relationships and reduced substance use. Adverse effects were minimal and transient. The findings highlight the need for inclusive psychedelic spaces that support healing and identity affirmation for queer communities, reclaiming psychedelics from past misuse in conversion therapy.
October 14, 2023
David S. Mathai, Daniel E. Roberts, Sandeep M. Nayak et al.
preprint
A longitudinal study of 679 adults planning to use psilocybin in naturalistic settings found that while most users (89.7%) described the experience as positive, acute feelings of shame or guilt were commonly reported (68.2% of users) and difficult to predict. The ability to constructively work through these feelings predicted wellbeing 2-4 weeks after use. Psilocybin produced a small but significant average decrease in trait shame that lasted 2-3 months, but trait shame increased in a notable minority (29.8%) of participants. The activation of shame-related experiences with psychedelics may pose a unique learning condition for both therapeutic and detrimental forms of memory reconsolidation.