PTSDAnxiety DisordersObsessive-Compulsive Disorder (OCD)Substance Use Disorders (SUD)Implementation & Service Delivery

Translating Psychedelic Therapies From Clinical Trials to Community Clinics: Building Bridges and Addressing Potential Challenges Ahead

Australian clinicians and researchers identify five categories of challenges—inherent risks, poor clinical practice, inadequate infrastructure, problematic perceptions and divisive relationships—that could impede translation of psychedelic-assisted therapies from trials to community clinics. They propose strategies including public-sector support for research and training, funding for equitable access, and the creation of a broadly endorsed multidisciplinary advisory body to guide policy, implementation and professional cohesion.

Authors

  • Paul Liknaitzky

Published

Frontiers in Psychiatry
individual Study

Abstract

Research exploring the potential of psychedelic-assisted therapies to treat a range of mental illnesses is flourishing, after the problematic sociopolitical history of psychedelics led to the shutdown of clinical research for almost 40 years. Encouraged by positive results, clinicians and patients are now hopeful that further interruptions to research will be avoided, so that the early promise of these therapies might be fulfilled. At this early stage of renewed interest, researchers are understandably focusing more on clinical trials to investigate safety and efficacy, than on longer-term goals such as progression to community practice. Looking to identify and avoid potential pitfalls on the path to community clinics, the authors, a group of Australian clinicians and researchers, met to discuss possible obstacles. Five broad categories of challenge were identified: 1) inherent risks; 2) poor clinical practice; 3) inadequate infrastructure; 4) problematic perceptions; and 5) divisive relationships and fractionation of the field. Our analysis led us to propose some strategies, including public sector support of research and training to establish best practice and optimize translation, and funding to address issues of equitable access to treatment. Above all, we believe that strategic planning and professional cohesion will be crucial for success. Accordingly, our key recommendation is the establishment of a multidisciplinary advisory body, broadly endorsed and representing all major stakeholders, to guide policy and implementation of psychedelic-assisted therapies in Australia. Although these challenges and strategies are framed within the Australian context, we sense that they may generalize to other parts of the world. Wherever they apply, we believe that anticipation of potential difficulties, and creative responses to address them, will be important to avoid roadblocks in the future and keep the “psychedelic renaissance” on track.

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Research Summary of 'Translating Psychedelic Therapies From Clinical Trials to Community Clinics: Building Bridges and Addressing Potential Challenges Ahead'

Introduction

Bennett-Levy and colleagues place their paper within the recent rapid resurgence of clinical research into psychedelic-assisted therapies (PAT) after several decades of prohibition. They define PAT as the therapeutic administration of classic psychedelics and empathogens such as MDMA together with psychotherapeutic intervention delivered by trained and accredited clinicians to treat conditions including mood disorders, anxiety, post-traumatic stress disorder, substance use disorders and obsessive-compulsive disorders. The authors note that most contemporary work has focused on clinical trials to establish safety and efficacy, while less attention has been paid to the practical challenges of moving effective trial protocols into routine community clinical practice. Against that background the paper aims to anticipate obstacles and propose strategies for translating PAT from research settings into community clinics. Two contextual considerations frame their analysis: first, that psychedelic medicines are ‘‘disruptive psychopharmacologies’’ that commonly produce strong emotional and phenomenological effects integral to therapeutic benefit; and second, that unprecedented community and media enthusiasm risks pressure to accelerate rollout. To examine potential pitfalls, the authors—Australian clinicians and researchers involved in PAT trials—convened to identify and elaborate five broad categories of challenge and to propose recommendations to support safe, effective and equitable translation into community care.

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Study Details

References (21)

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