Clinical competency
Post-dose follow-up, safety monitoring, and retention support
Teaches ongoing participant contact after dosing to support stability, detect delayed adverse effects, maintain therapeutic containment, and sustain adherence to follow-up visits and outcome assessments.
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Guidelines
37
Courses
0
Providers
0
Protocols
7
Classification
Competency categories
Protocol families
Source quality
Also known as
Across the manuals
The manuals converge on the need for active post-dose contact rather than passive discharge. Across MDMA, psilocybin, LSD, ayahuasca, ibogaine, ketamine, and 5-MeO-DMT materials, the common pattern is scheduled follow-up calls or visits, checking physical and emotional state, reviewing adverse events or symptom change, and keeping participants aware of how to reach the team between sessions. Several sources also link follow-up to retention, with repeated contact attempts, reminder systems, and flexible or remote check-ins to keep people engaged through the study period. Sources differ mainly in the intensity and duration of follow-up. Some manuals focus on the first hours or days after dosing, such as daily calls for a week, 12 and 24 hour check-ins, or day 1, day 2, and day 7 assessments. Others extend monitoring for weeks, months, or even years, including 12 month, 6 month, and long-term follow-up. They also differ in emphasis, with some stressing safety surveillance for delayed distress, suicidality, insomnia, or medical issues, while others place more weight on integration, aftercare coordination, referral, and continuity with external clinicians or ordinary life.
In practice
What it looks like on the ground
- Makes scheduled post-dose contact by phone or visit at protocol-defined timepoints
- Checks for delayed adverse effects, suicidality, mood change, or other emerging concerns
- Keeps participants informed about how to reach the team between sessions
- Uses repeated reminders or contact attempts to support follow-up attendance
Assessment signals in the sources
Synthesised from the linked source documents; refreshed as the library updates.
Linked sources
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Linked guidelines (37)
Rapid antidepressant effects of the psychedelic ayahuasca in treatment-resistant depression: a randomized placebo-controlled trial
DMT / AyahuascaEvidence score: 100
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