Equity and Ethics

Psychedelics and Psychotherapy

This book chapter (2020) in Pharmacopsychiatry provides an excellent review of our current understanding of psychedelics for psychotherapy.

Authors

  • Matthew Johnson
  • Sandeep Nayak

Published

Pharmacopsychiatry
meta Study

Abstract

Psychedelics have shown great promise in modern clinical trials for treating various psychiatric conditions. As a transdiagnostic treatment that exerts its effects through subjective experiences that leave enduring effects, it is akin to psychotherapy. To date, there has been insufficient discussion of how psychedelic therapy is similar to and different from conventional psychotherapy. In this article, we review the shared features of effective conventional psychotherapies and situate therapeutic psychedelic effects within those. We then discuss how psychedelic drug effects might amplify conventional psychotherapeutic processes-particularly via effects on meaning and relationship-as well as features that make psychedelic treatment unique. Taking into account shared features of conventional psychotherapies and unique psychedelic drug effects, we create a framework for understanding why psychedelics are likely to be effective with very diverse types of psychotherapies. We also review the formal psychotherapies that have been adjunctively included in modern psychedelic trials and extend the understanding of psychedelics as psychotherapy towards implications for clinical ethics and trial design. We aim to provide some common conceptual vocabulary that can be used to frame therapeutic psychedelic effects beyond the confines of any one specific modality.

Unlocked with Blossom Pro

Research Summary of 'Psychedelics and Psychotherapy'

Editorial

βBlossom's Take

This chapter is useful because it frames psychedelic treatment as psychotherapy with a pharmacological intensifier, which is a clearer way to think about many modern trials than a simple drug-effect model. Its main contribution is conceptual, especially around meaning, relationship and ethical questions about suggestibility, and it helps connect clinical outcomes to psychotherapy common factors.

Introduction

The paper frames modern therapeutic psychedelic research within the broader history of psychotherapy and argues that psychedelic-assisted interventions fulfil the core features of psychotherapy as defined by Jerome Frank: an emotionally charged, confiding relationship with an expert, a healing setting, a plausible explanatory rationale, and a ritual requiring joint participation. From this perspective, the authors propose that durable changes following psychedelics are not reducible to acute pharmacology alone but depend critically on the subjective experience and on learning and integration that follow the drug session. Nayak and colleagues set out to treat psychedelic therapy explicitly as psychotherapy: they review how psychedelics interact with well-established common factors of effective psychotherapies, outline the ways psychedelic effects may amplify psychotherapeutic processes (especially meaning-making, relationship, and skill acquisition), survey formal psychotherapeutic frames used in modern trials, and discuss the clinical, ethical, and methodological implications for trial design and practice. The paper is presented as a conceptual/narrative review aimed at providing vocabulary and practical prescriptions for thinking about psychedelic treatments within psychotherapy frameworks.

Methods

The extracted text does not report a formal methods section or a systematic search strategy. Instead, the paper is a narrative review and conceptual analysis drawing on prior clinical trials, qualitative studies, surveys, historical accounts, and theoretical literature to synthesise how psychedelic effects map onto common psychotherapeutic factors. Because no explicit inclusion/exclusion criteria, databases searched, or formal risk-of-bias procedures are described in the extracted text, the review should be understood as interpretive and illustrative rather than a systematic meta-analysis. The authors cite empirical findings (quantitative trials and qualitative reports) and use exemplars from modern trials and ethnographic accounts to underpin their arguments, and they recommend process measures and trial designs based on these sources.

Results

The review's core empirical and observational points are organised around established common factors of psychotherapy and how psychedelics may engage or amplify them. Earlier psychotherapy research is invoked to show that many bona fide psychotherapies produce broadly equivalent effects (the "Dodo Bird Verdict"); a cited synthesis of meta-analyses found small average differences among active psychotherapies (mean Cohen's d = 0.20). The therapeutic alliance—agreement on goals and tasks and the affective bond—has a robust association with outcome (reported meta-analytic association Cohen's d = 0.57). On meaning-making, the authors note that psychedelic experiences frequently generate a heightened sense of meaning: moderate to high doses of psilocybin (>20 mg/70 kg) are reported to rank among participants' top 5 most meaningful life events even 14 months later. Measures of mystical-type experience correlate strongly with scales of oceanic boundlessness (MEQ30 correlated with the Oceanic Boundlessness subscale of the 5D-ASC, r = 0.93). The review also cites qualitative reports showing that therapeutic change after psychedelics may centre on forgiveness, self-compassion, catharsis, and insight as well as classical mystical content. Regarding relationship factors, qualitative and survey data indicate that psychedelic sessions can intensify affective bonds between participants and guides and broaden social connectedness, including connection to self and world. The papers cited report themes of participants feeling bonded to guides after dosing and increased connectedness in prospective and retrospective surveys. On skill acquisition, open-label studies of psilocybin and ayahuasca are noted to increase trait mindfulness without formal mindfulness training, and qualitative data suggest enhanced emotional acceptance and self-mastery following challenging experiences. The review summarises the formal psychotherapies that have been paired with psychedelics in modern trials: Motivational Enhancement Therapy (MET) in psilocybin trials for alcohol dependence, cognitive–behavioural approaches in smoking cessation work, and proposals to integrate third-wave behavioural therapies such as Acceptance and Commitment Therapy (ACT), Dialectical Behaviour Therapy, and mindfulness-based approaches. Specific frameworks proposed for psychedelic therapy include ACT-like models and the ACE (accept, connect, embody) formulation. A substantial methodological result of the review is the clear difficulty of maintaining blind integrity in psychedelic trials. Therapist accuracy in identifying active versus control drug was high in several studies: therapists distinguished LSD from an ephedrine placebo in 19/20 cases (95%) and LSD from placebo in 24/28 cases (86%). In Ross et al., therapists correctly identified psilocybin versus niacin in 28/29 cases (97%). Griffiths et al. reported improved blinding where both therapists misidentified drug in 23% of sessions, but participant guesses were not recorded. Palhano-Fontes et al.'s randomized, placebo-controlled ayahuasca trial found that about one-third of the placebo group believed they had received ayahuasca. The authors estimate that functional unblinding in psychedelic trials is likely substantial—perhaps at least 80% in some studies—complicating causal inference. To address blinding and expectancy, the review surveys trial design options, including multi-arm designs (high-dose psychedelic plus psychological support; an active psychoactive control of similar subjective duration plus support; placebo plus support; and a minimal-support psychedelic arm) and the value of clinician-referred, psychedelic-naïve participants. The authors recommend measuring psychotherapeutic process variables commonly used in psychotherapy research—examples offered include the WAI-SR for working alliance, the Barrett-Lennard Relationship Inventory for affective relationship, and the Credibility and Expectancy Questionnaire (CEQ)—to disentangle expectancy/placebo mediators from psychotherapeutic processes.

Discussion

Nayak and colleagues interpret the literature to mean that psychedelic-assisted interventions operate substantially through the same common factors that explain much of psychotherapy's effectiveness—meaning-making, a strong therapeutic relationship, and training or activation of psychological skills—while also providing unique amplification of those factors via intense subjective experiences. They argue that mystical-type phenomena are a prominent exemplar of a broader process (heightened meaning) rather than the sole mechanism of benefit, and that other acute subjective constructs such as psychological insight or emotional breakthrough also relate prospectively to improvements. The authors position these conclusions against prior psychotherapy research showing equivalence across many modalities and contend that psychedelics' suggestibility-enhancing properties broaden the range of plausible therapeutic frames that can be effective. However, they also warn of ethical and epistemic risks: suggestibility under psychedelics may facilitate maladaptive or non-scientific belief formation (for example, false memories or non-empirical convictions), and such potential harms should be considered in informed consent and future research. The review highlights the need to study which factors (personality, prior beliefs, guide characteristics, setting) most strongly predict belief change. Methodological limitations acknowledged by the authors include the difficulty of preserving blinding in psychedelic trials and the resulting entanglement of direct pharmacological effects, contextual psychotherapeutic effects, their interaction, and expectancy/placebo influences. They recommend explicit measurement of common-factor process variables, systematic assessment of blind integrity, use of multi-arm or comparative-effectiveness designs when appropriate, and consideration of clinician-referred, psychedelic-naïve samples to reduce expectancy confounds. Finally, the authors call for further research to characterise acute subjective predictors of outcome, to quantify epistemic harms, and to refine trial designs that honestly address the psychotherapy-plus-drug nature of modern psychedelic interventions.

Conclusion

The authors conclude that psychedelic-assisted treatment is best understood as psychotherapy amplified by a drug that intensifies meaning, relatedness, and psychological skills. They reiterate the flexibility of psychedelic effects across diverse therapeutic frames, caution about ethical concerns related to suggestibility and belief change, and express scepticism that any single psychotherapeutic approach is uniquely optimal. Concluding remarks emphasise the need for explicit discussion of psychedelic therapy as psychotherapy, better measurement of common psychotherapeutic processes in trials, and continued debate about clinical and ethical implications.

Study Details

References (30)

Papers cited by this study that are also in Blossom

Psilocybin-occasioned mystical experiences in the treatment of tobacco addiction

Garcia-Romeu, A., Griffiths, R. R., Johnson, M. W. · Current Drug Abuse Reviews (2015)

478 cited
Psilocybin-assisted treatment for alcohol dependence: a proof-of-concept study

Bogenschutz, M. P., Forcehimes, A. A., Pommy, J. A. et al. · Journal of Psychopharmacology (2015)

1150 cited
Psilocybin with psychological support for treatment-resistant depression: an open-label feasibility study

Carhart-Harris, R. L., Bolstridge, M., Rucker, J. et al. · Lancet Psychiatry (2016)

1520 cited
Safety and efficacy of lysergic acid diethylamide-assisted psychotherapy for anxiety associated with life-threatening diseases

Gasser, P., Holstein, D., Michel, Y. et al. · Journal of Nervous and Mental Disease (2014)

744 cited
Safety, Tolerability, and Efficacy of Psilocybin in 9 Patients With Obsessive-Compulsive Disorder

Moreno, F. A., Wiegand, C. B., Taitano, E. K. et al. · Journal of Clinical Psychiatry (2006)

778 cited
814 cited
Show all 30 references
The fabric of meaning and subjective effects in LSD-induced states depend on serotonin 2A receptor activation

Preller, K. H., Herdener, M., Pokorny, T. et al. · Current Biology (2017)

399 cited
Psilocybin can occasion mystical-type experiences having substantial and sustained personal meaning and spiritual significance

Griffiths, R. R., Richards, W. A., Mccann, U. et al. · Journal of Psychopharmacology (2006)

1671 cited
Psilocybin occasioned mystical-type experiences: immediate and persisting dose-related effects

Griffiths, R. R., Johnson, M. W., Richards, W. A. et al. · Psychopharmacology (2011)

934 cited
LSD enhances suggestibility in healthy volunteers

Carhart-Harris, R. L., Kaelen, M., Whalley, M. G. et al. · Psychopharmacology (2014)

318 cited
Psychedelics and connectedness

Carhart-Harris, R. L., Erritzoe, D., Haijen, E. C. H. M. et al. · Psychopharmacology (2017)

266 cited
189 cited
Exploring the therapeutic potential of Ayahuasca: acute intake increases mindfulness-related capacities

Soler, J., Elices, M., Franquesa, A. et al. · Psychopharmacology (2015)

211 cited
146 cited
Validation of the revised Mystical Experience Questionnaire in experimental sessions with psilocybin

Barrett, F. S., Johnson, M. W., Griffiths, R. R. · Journal of Psychopharmacology (2015)

623 cited
Clinical interpretations of patient experience in a trial of psilocybin-assisted psychotherapy for alcohol use disorder

Bogenschutz, M. P., Podrebarac, S. K., Duane, J. H. et al. · Frontiers in Pharmacology (2018)

121 cited
Emotional breakthrough and psychedelics: validation of the emotional breakthrough inventory

Roseman, L., Haijen, E. C. H. M., Idialu-Ikato, K. et al. · Journal of Psychopharmacology (2019)

403 cited
Alterations of consciousness and mystical-type experiences after acute LSD in humans

Liechti, M. E., Dolder, P. C., Schmid, Y. · Psychopharmacology (2016)

202 cited
Development of a Psychotherapeutic Model for Psilocybin-Assisted Treatment of Alcoholism

Bogenschutz, M. P., Forcehimes, A. A. · Journal of Humanistic Psychology (2016)

95 cited
Ketamine psychedelic therapy (KPT): a review of the results of ten years of research

Krupitsky, E. M., Grinenko, A. Y. · Journal of Psychoactive Drugs (1997)

238 cited
Psilocybin-assisted therapy of major depressive disorder using Acceptance and Commitment Therapy as a therapeutic frame

Sloshower, J., Guss, J., Krause, R. et al. · Journal of Contextual Behavioral Science (2020)

164 cited
The use of the psychological flexibility model to support psychedelic assisted therapy

Watts, R., Luoma, J. B. · Journal of Contextual Behavioral Science (2020)

256 cited

Cited By (19)

Papers in Blossom that reference this study

Enhanced meaning in life following psychedelic use: converging evidence from controlled and naturalistic studies

Roseby, W., Kettner, H., Roseman, L. et al. · Frontiers in Psychology (2025)

5 cited
3 cited
Treatment with psychedelics is psychotherapy: beyond reductionism

Gründer, G., Brand, M., Mertens, L. J. et al. · Lancet Psychiatry (2024)

100 cited
Potential therapeutic effects of an ayahuasca-inspired N,N-DMT and harmine formulation: a controlled trial in healthy subjects

Aicher, H. D., Mueller, M. J., Dornbierer, D. A. et al. · Frontiers in Psychiatry (2024)

31 cited
When the Trial Ends: The Case for Post-Trial Provisions in Clinical Psychedelic Research

Jacobs, E., Murphy-Beiner, A., Rouiller, I. et al. · Neuroethics (2023)

21 cited
The Therapeutic Alliance in Psychedelic-Assisted Psychotherapy: A Novel Target for Research and Interventions

Kamilar-Britt, P., Gordis, E. B., Earleywine, M. · Psychedelic Medicine (2023)

14 cited
The therapeutic potential of psychedelics: the European regulatory perspective

Butlen-Ducuing, F., McCulloch, D. E-W., Haberkamp, M. et al. · Lancet (2023)

25 cited
Show all 19 papers
The Altered States Database: Psychometric data from a systematic literature review

Prugger, J., Derdiyok, E., Dinkelacker, J. et al. · Scientific Data (2022)

35 cited
Pattern Breaking: A Complex Systems Approach to Psychedelic Medicine

Hipólito, I., Mago, J., Rosas, F. E. et al. · Psyarxiv (2022)

13 cited
Classic Psychedelics in Addiction Treatment: The Case for Psilocybin in Tobacco Smoking Cessation

Johnson, M. W. · Current Topics in Behavioral Neurosciences (2022)

31 cited
Therapeutic Alliance and Rapport Modulate Responses to Psilocybin Assisted Therapy for Depression

Murphy, R., Murphy-Beiner, A., Kettner, H. et al. · Frontiers in Pharmacology (2022)

222 cited
How Psychedelic-Assisted Treatment Works in the Bayesian Brain

Villiger, D. · Frontiers in Psychiatry (2022)

15 cited
Human behavioral pharmacology of psychedelics

Strickland, J. C., Johnson, M. W. · Advances in Pharmacology (2022)

13 cited
Novel Treatment Approaches for Substance Use Disorders: Therapeutic Use of Psychedelics and the Role of Psychotherapy

Johnson, M. W., Gründer, G., Betzler, F. et al. · Current Addiction Reports (2021)

37 cited
Psychedelics and Consciousness: Distinctions, Demarcations, and Opportunities

Yaden, D. B., Johnson, M. W., Griffiths, R. R. et al. · International Journal of Neuropsychopharmacology (2021)

52 cited
The Potential Role of Psychedelic Drugs in Mental Health Care of the Future

Gründer, G., Jungaberle, H., Gründer, G. · Pharmacopsychiatry (2021)

32 cited