Research Keyword: Therapeutic alliance

Psychedelic-Assisted Therapy: Potential Benefits and Challenges in Mental Health Treatment

This review examines how psychedelic substances like psilocybin and MDMA, when combined with professional psychotherapy, show promise in treating difficult-to-treat mental health conditions including depression, PTSD, and anxiety. While early research suggests these substances could help in cases where conventional treatments have failed, the evidence is still preliminary and limited by small study sizes. Psychedelics appear to work by changing how the brain processes information and memories, though much more rigorous research is needed before they can be considered standard treatments.

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Catalyst for change: Psilocybin’s antidepressant mechanisms—A systematic review

This research review examines how psilocybin, a compound from certain mushrooms, may help treat depression by creating changes in both brain function and psychological experience. Within supportive therapeutic settings, psilocybin appears to increase cognitive flexibility, help people better process emotions, and restore a sense of connection to themselves, others, and the world. The antidepressant benefits seem to work through a combination of direct brain changes and psychotherapeutic factors, rather than through pure pharmacological action alone.

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Patient perspectives and experiences with psilocybin treatment for treatment-resistant depression: a qualitative study

This study explored how patients with severe depression that didn’t respond to typical treatments experienced psilocybin therapy. Researchers interviewed 11 patients about their experiences and found that building trust with therapists, managing expectations, and having multiple treatment sessions were crucial. Many patients found the experience intense and overwhelming, and most wanted ongoing support to understand what they experienced and how it affected their recovery.

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Psilocybin for treatment resistant depression in patients taking a concomitant SSRI medication

Researchers tested whether people with severe depression could take psilocybin (a compound from certain mushrooms) while staying on their antidepressant medications. In this study of 19 people, those who received psilocybin with psychological support while continuing their SSRI showed significant improvement in depression symptoms over three weeks, with response rates of 42%. Side effects were mostly mild and temporary, suggesting this approach may be safe and effective without requiring patients to stop their current antidepressants.

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Psychedelics and the treatment of eating disorders: considerations for future research and practice

As researchers explore using psychedelic drugs like psilocybin to treat eating disorders, this article outlines important safety considerations and ethical guidelines needed before widespread use. While some early trials show promise, significant concerns exist including physiological risks (heart problems, nausea), psychological challenges, potential for therapist misconduct, and medication interactions. The authors recommend rigorous research designs, better inclusion of diverse populations, and careful integration of psychedelics with proven eating disorder treatments.

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