Psychedelic Medicine
February 16, 2023
Zachary Skiles, Noa Eaton, Lisa Fredenburg et al.
49 citations
Most psychedelic therapists in a Usona Institute trial for psilocybin and major depressive disorder had personal experience with psychedelics: 88% had used at least one serotonergic psychedelic, most commonly psilocybin (81%), with a median of 2–10 uses and last use 6–12 months before the survey. The sample was predominantly white, female, and held doctoral degrees. All endorsed favorable views of psilocybin therapy. Experiential learning is common in psychotherapy but not psychiatry, placing psychedelic therapy between two traditions. The study was limited by a low response rate (22%) and lack of diversity. These first data on professionals' personal use inform the debate on whether such experience aids competency or introduces bias.
November 6, 2023
Jacob S. Aday, David P Horton, Gisele Fernandes‐osterhold et al.
5 citations
preprint
Psychedelic-assisted psychotherapy (PAP) combines a psychedelic substance with psychotherapeutic support, yet the specific role and necessary components of the psychotherapy itself remain understudied. This review examines current PAP clinical trial models and theoretical frameworks, then draws lessons from traditional psychotherapy research on standardizing treatments, identifying mechanisms of change, and optimizing trial designs. The authors conclude that PAP is a unique transdisciplinary intervention and call for increased research on its psychotherapeutic component to inform best practices and federal guidelines.
August 25, 2024
Stephanie L. Haft, Amanda E. Downey, Marissa Reymond-Flesch et al.
1 citation
preprint
Limited participant diversity in mental health intervention research perpetuates health disparities, a concern especially relevant to psychedelic-assisted psychotherapy (PAT). This systematic review of 21 randomized controlled trials of psilocybin- and MDMA-assisted therapies (total 1,034 participants) found that gender (100%) and race or ethnicity (76%) were frequently reported, while socioeconomic status was sometimes reported (57%) using varied measures. Sexual orientation (9.5%) and immigration status (4.8%) were rarely reported, and no studies reported gender identity. Black/African-American (12.2%) and Hispanic/Latino (7.2%) participants were significantly underrepresented compared to the US population and non-psychedelic clinical trials. MDMA trials enrolled more diverse samples than psilocybin trials. Analyses of treatment effects by sociodemographic variables were virtually nonexistent, highlighting the need for inclusive recruitment and rigorous reporting to improve generalizability.