Skip to content

Jordi Cantillo

Associació de la Paràlisi Cerebral

6 papers in the library · 170 citations · publishing 2017-2026

Papers

Therapeutic potential of ayahuasca in grief: a prospective, observational study

Psychopharmacology January 14, 2020 Débora González, Jordi Cantillo, Irene Hidalgo Pérez et al. 73 citations

In a bereaved sample attending Shipibo ayahuasca ceremonies in Peru, grief severity decreased substantially from baseline to 12 months, with large effect sizes (Cohen's d = 0.84 at 15 days, 1.38 at 3 months, 1.16 at 6 months, and 1.39 at 12 months). Reductions in grief were linked to lower experiential avoidance (r = 0.55) and greater decentering (r = -0.47). The ceremonial use of ayahuasca appears to have therapeutic value for grief, with acceptance and decentering as mediating psychological processes.

Potential Use of Ayahuasca in Grief Therapy

OMEGA - Journal of Death and Dying May 30, 2017 Débora González, Maria Carmo Carvalho, Jordi Cantillo et al. 43 citations

People who took ayahuasca reported lower levels of grief compared to those who attended peer-support groups, as measured by the Present Feelings Scale of the Texas Revised Inventory of Grief. The ayahuasca group showed benefits in psychological and interpersonal dimensions. Qualitative responses described emotional release, biographical memories, and experiences of contact with the deceased. Some benefits were identified regarding the ayahuasca experiences. These results provide preliminary data about the potential of ayahuasca as a therapeutic tool for grief.

The Shipibo Ceremonial Use of Ayahuasca to Promote Well-Being: An Observational Study

Frontiers in Pharmacology May 5, 2021 Débora González, Jordi Cantillo, Irene Hidalgo Pérez et al. 39 citations

People who took part in an Indigenous Shipibo healing program involving ayahuasca ceremonies showed significant increases in psychological well-being, happiness, and quality of life that lasted up to 12 months. A subgroup analysis indicated the improvements were due to the program rather than the passage of time. A relationship was found between decentering—the ability to observe thoughts and feelings objectively—and enhanced psychological well-being.

Restorative Retelling for Processing Psychedelic Experiences: Rationale and Case Study of Complicated Grief

Frontiers in Psychology May 3, 2022 Débora González, Marc Aixalà, Robert A. Neimeyer et al. 15 citations

A woman suffering from complicated grief after her mother's suicide participated in an ayahuasca ceremony followed by Restorative Retelling sessions to process the psychedelic experience. The case report describes how ayahuasca evoked key psychological content related to her loss, and how the adapted Restorative Retelling technique helped integrate that content into autobiographical memory, fostering meaning-making. Evaluations before the ayahuasca experience and after Restorative Retelling suggest reductions in symptoms of complicated grief and general psychopathology. The authors propose that Restorative Retelling can effectively process and integrate psychedelic experiences, though they note limitations of a single case.

Symmetrical Global Mental Health (Sym-GMH): Ayahuasca and shipibo traditional medicine for lasting changes in personality and quality of life

Psychedelics April 20, 2026 José Carlos Bouso, Óscar Andión, Jordi Cantillo et al.

A 12-month study of 264 Western participants who attended Shipibo-led ayahuasca retreats in the Peruvian Amazon found lasting psychological improvements. Neuroticism and Openness to Experience decreased, while Extraversion increased. Quality of life improved across all measured domains, and decentering capacities increased with moderate to high effect sizes. Most participants (91.7%) reported long-term benefits, primarily in spiritual well-being, mental health, and personal growth. Adverse effects were minimal (2.3%). Higher baseline psychological distress was associated with higher Neuroticism and lower decentering, suggesting that enhancing decentering may serve as a resilience factor. The findings support ethical, non-extractive integration of traditional Amazonian practices into global mental health frameworks.

Could Ayahuasca Communities Play a Role in the Compassionate Communities Movement?: A Commentary

Archives of Pharmacology and Therapeutics January 1, 2024 Débora González, Jordi Cantillo, José Carlos Bouso

Grief is a universal and recurrent experience, as each of the approximately 58 million annual deaths worldwide directly affects about nine close relatives. This underscores that bereavement is not a one-time event but a process that can occur multiple times across a person's life.