Frontiers in Psychiatry (Feb 2020)

Learning to Let Go: A Cognitive-Behavioral Model of How Psychedelic Therapy Promotes Acceptance

  • Max Wolff,
  • Max Wolff,
  • Max Wolff,
  • Ricarda Evens,
  • Lea J. Mertens,
  • Michael Koslowski,
  • Felix Betzler,
  • Gerhard Gründer,
  • Henrik Jungaberle

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3389/fpsyt.2020.00005
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 11

Abstract

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The efficacy of psychedelic-assisted therapies for mental disorders has been attributed to the lasting change from experiential avoidance to acceptance that these treatments appear to facilitate. This article presents a conceptual model that specifies potential psychological mechanisms underlying such change, and that shows substantial parallels between psychedelic therapy and cognitive behavioral therapy: We propose that in the carefully controlled context of psychedelic therapy as applied in contemporary clinical research, psychedelic-induced belief relaxation can increase motivation for acceptance via operant conditioning, thus engendering episodes of relatively avoidance-free exposure to greatly intensified private events. Under these unique learning conditions, relaxed avoidance-related beliefs can be exposed to corrective information and become revised accordingly, which may explain long-term increases in acceptance and corresponding reductions in psychopathology. Open research questions and implications for clinical practice are discussed.

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