Attitudes and perceptions of psychedelic therapy among clinical trial participants with alcohol use disorder: a mixed-method study
Psychopharmacology June 10, 2026 Julian Kirsch, C. Poppe, Anne Beck et al.
Most people with alcohol use disorder (AUD) are aware of psychedelic research and would be willing to try psychedelic therapy, but their openness depends heavily on expecting it to succeed. In a mixed-method study of 112 participants from two non-psychedelic clinical trials and 10 patients from addiction outpatient services, 62.5% knew about psychedelic research and 64.3% were willing to join a psychedelic therapy trial. Willingness was strongly linked to higher expectations of research success, not to age or knowledge alone. Interviews revealed a spectrum of attitudes shaped by perceived therapeutic potential, fears of addiction or loss of control, personal and societal experiences with substances, and media exposure. Expectation of benefit was central to openness.