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Arpana Agrawal

Division of Addiction Science, Prevention, and Treatment, Department of Psychiatry, Washington University School of Medicine, St. Louis, Missouri.

1 paper in the library · publishing 2026

Papers

Hallucinogen-Psychosis Associations Are Confounded by Baseline Psychiatric History.

The Journal of clinical psychiatry June 10, 2026 Jacob T Steinle, Suraj Shankar, Joshua S Siegel et al.

After adjusting for preexisting psychiatric conditions, the link between hallucinogen use and psychosis disappears. Among 273,466 people with substance-related hospital admissions, psychosis diagnoses were more common after hallucinogen-related admissions (16.4%) than after other substance admissions (6.6%). However, once clinical characteristics were accounted for, the increased risk became nonsignificant (hazard ratio 0.97). This suggests that observed associations between hallucinogens and psychosis are largely due to underlying mental health vulnerabilities, not a direct causal effect. The findings inform psychedelic policy by indicating that population-level data on hallucinogen safety may reflect preexisting risk factors.