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Clinical competency

Acute psychological response and emergency management during dosing

Cluster covering 35 related competencies for monitoring acute psychological effects, recognising and managing distress, crisis containment, emergency escalation, and rescue-medication coordination during psychedelic dosing sessions.

Mixed evidenceMixed

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Guidelines

51

Courses

2

Providers

2

Protocols

8

Classification

Source quality

Course pageLab manualProtocol paperSOP / guidebookTrial supplement

Also known as

Acute adverse event responseAcute behavioral observationAcute psychedelic effect managementAcute psychedelic effect observationAcute psychological monitoringAltered-state observation and containmentChallenging experience support and groundingClinical observation during MDMA administrationClinical observation of acute psychological effectsClinical safety observation during dosingCompassionate presenceCrisis and emergency responseCrisis containment and de-escalation in psychedelic statesCrisis containment during psychedelic effectsEmergency escalation and rescue planningEmergency response and medical monitoringEmergency response and rescue medication awarenessEmergency response and rescue medication useEmergency response managementEvaluate acute subjective drug effectsGuiding participants through difficult psychedelic experiencesManage acute distress and destabilizationManagement of acute psychedelic effectsManagement of acute psychological distressManagement of challenging psychedelic experiencesManagement of psychological distress and destabilizationManaging acute psychological reactionsMedication and rescue-intervention awarenessMonitor acute psychological responsesMonitoring acute psychoactive effectsMonitoring and responding to acute psychological distressMonitoring and response to acute psychological distressParticipant monitoring during acute drug effectsPhysical safety monitoring during dosingPsilocybin adverse effect managementPsychedelic research safety practicesPsychedelic session monitoringPsychedelic session support and presencePsychiatric crisis recognition and responsePsychiatric destabilization managementPsychiatric destabilization monitoringPsychiatric safety monitoringPsychoactive effect recognitionPsychological containment of challenging experiencesPsychological distress managementPsychological stabilization and crisis interventionPsychological support during psychedelic statesRecognition of acute psychological reactionsRecognition of adverse psychological reactionsRemain present through acute drug effectsRescue-medication coordinationRespectful management of challenging experiencesRespond to acute anxiety and panic during sessionsSafety and adverse effect monitoringSafety monitoring and vital sign surveillanceSafety monitoring during dosingSafety monitoring of acute psychiatric effectsSafety-oriented monitoring of acute reactionsSession monitoring and clinical observationSession monitoring and continuous observationSession monitoring and vital sign observationSupport for difficult psychedelic experiencesSupport for emotional processing during acute MDMA sessionSupportive in-session presenceSupportive management of acute psychological reactionsTherapeutic presence during altered statesUnderstand acute psychological effects of LSDUse of rescue medicationsUse stepwise de-escalation and grounding in acute distressWork therapeutically with anxiety and distress

Across the manuals

Across the manuals, there is strong agreement that acute dosing sessions require continuous or near continuous observation, calm therapeutic presence, and rapid recognition of distress, confusion, panic, paranoia, dissociation, suicidality, or psychosis-like reactions. Many sources also converge on first-line containment through reassurance, grounding, non-directive support, and minimising unnecessary stimulation while the altered state unfolds. The manuals differ mainly in how explicitly they define escalation. Some give detailed rescue pathways and medication options, including benzodiazepines, antihypertensives, antipsychotics, zolpidem, or physician-led referral to emergency care, overnight monitoring, hospital observation, or locked inpatient admission. Others stay more general, focusing on supportive containment and observation without specifying medication or transfer thresholds. They also differ in emphasis on the acute experience itself. Several manuals frame intense effects as potentially therapeutically meaningful and recommend allowing the experience to unfold, while others place more weight on structured safety monitoring, vital signs, and formal psychiatric assessment. A few extracts also distinguish between transient expected effects and reactions that become unsafe, prolonged, or incompatible with continued exposure.

In practice

What it looks like on the ground

  • Stays in the room and maintains calm, non-directive presence throughout dosing
  • Notices and names acute distress, confusion, paranoia, dissociation, or suicidality promptly
  • Uses reassurance, grounding, and environmental reduction of stimulation during difficult moments
  • Escalates to rescue medication, physician review, or emergency referral when safety deteriorates

Assessment signals in the sources

BPRSC-SSRSCADSSCADR

Synthesised from the linked source documents; refreshed as the library updates.

Linked sources

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Linked guidelines (51)

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