Skip to content

James Bennett-Levy

1 paper in the library · publishing 2026

Papers

“You can only take your clients as far as you’ve been yourself”: examining the intersections between psychedelic-assisted therapy, lived-living experience, and clinical practice

Drugs Education Prevention and Policy March 22, 2026 Jordan J. Negrine, Stephen Bright, Monica J. Barratt et al.

In interviews, twenty Australian psychologists expressed that a therapist's own lived or living experience with psychedelics could enhance empathy, confidence, and therapeutic rapport in psychedelic-assisted therapy, especially given lingering stigma. They noted that the intense, altered states of PAT demand deeper therapist familiarity, which lived experience may uniquely improve beyond standard training. Most supported optional, safe, and structured inclusion of such experience in formal training, respecting ethical considerations. The findings indicate growing professional openness to experiential learning as a valuable, though not mandatory, component of preparing psychedelic therapists.