Therapeutic-Like Context and Relational Support During Psychedelic Use Moderate Links Among Stress, Challenging Experiences, and Psychological Outcomes.
Aaron D Cherniak, Pehr Granqvist, Mario Mikulincer, Max Wolff
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
Research has established that life stress may elevate the likelihood of challenging experiences with psychedelics, which may be linked to poorer outcomes from psychedelic use. Studies have highlighted the importance of therapeutic support, but questions remain about the type of effective support and its specific contribution. We examined the contribution of therapeutic-like contexts and support on the relationship between life stress and challenging psychedelic experiences and between challenging experiences and psychological outcomes. An online survey was conducted in an international sample (N = 1,867) of psychedelic users. Statistical analyses were conducted to examine the moderating roles of therapeutic-like context and support on presumed links between life stress and challenging psychedelic experiences and between challenging experiences and outcomes. Data generally supported theorized associations among stressful life events, challenging psychedelic experiences, therapeutic-like context/support, and psychological outcomes. Therapeutic-like context mitigated the association of stressful life events with challenging experiences and the association of challenging experiences with coping, but not other associations. Interaction effects indicated that the degree of therapeutic-like support moderated the association of challenging experiences with valence, impact on coping, and impact on well-being. In other regression models, therapeutic-like support maintained significant independent effects, but interaction effects were not found. Therapeutic-like context and support were found to moderate links between life stress and challenging psychedelic experiences and between challenging experiences and outcomes. These findings may be relevant to clinical uses of psychedelics in therapeutic contexts and harm reduction practices in naturalistic contexts.