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Donna M Rizzo

Department of Family Medicine, Vermont Conversation Lab, University of Vermont, Burlington, Vermont, USA.

2 papers in the library · 6 citations · publishing 2023-2026

Papers

Developing a Direct Observation Measure of Therapeutic Connection in Psilocybin-Assisted Therapy: A Feasibility Study

Journal of Palliative Medicine August 17, 2023 Robert Gramling, Emily Bennett, Keith Curtis et al. 6 citations

Directly observing therapeutic connection during psilocybin-assisted therapy is feasible. In a clinical trial, three coders independently reviewed audio and video from four 8-hour psilocybin administration sessions, identifying 372 moments of therapeutic connection. Eighty-three percent of these moments were detected by at least two coders, and 41% by all three. Coders used both audible cues (speech prosody, words) and visible cues (body movements, eye gaze, touch) in 51% of observed events. The expressions of connection varied as the drug's effects on consciousness changed over time. The findings suggest that evaluating both sound and video is necessary to capture the full range of therapeutic connection.

Developing Methods for Observing Awe Narration in Psilocybin-Assisted Therapy.

Healthcare (Basel, Switzerland) June 5, 2026 Elise C Tarbi, Ian Bhatia, Nabil Balach et al.

A direct observation coding system can reliably identify moments when people narrate experiences of awe during psychedelic-assisted therapy. In 32 video-recorded therapy sessions from a Phase 2 trial of psilocybin-assisted therapy for advanced cancer, two coders independently identified 246 moments of awe narration across 16,760 minutes. Coders were substantially more confident when vastness was present (odds ratio 4.3). The coding system was refined to split accommodation into two components: initial cognitive disruption and later engagement with that disruption. Awe narration is observable using explicit definitional criteria, providing a foundation for larger-scale studies.