Crisis Support Services & Hotlines
Crisis intervention hotlines and services providing immediate support for psychedelic-related emergencies.
- Organisations
- 2
- Countries
- 2
- Source-verified
- 1
By country
What each service offers
| Organisation | Service Channel | Crisis Support Level | Population |
|---|---|---|---|
| Fireside Project | Phone Hotline / WarmlineSMS / Text SupportIntegration / Aftercare SupportReferral / Handoff Navigation | Crisis Support with Referral Escalation | People in Acute DistressPsychedelic Service UsersGeneral Public |
| ICEERS | Harm Reduction Education ContentIntegration / Aftercare SupportReferral / Handoff NavigationClinician / Professional Training | Peer Support (No Emergency Dispatch) | Psychedelic Service UsersGeneral PublicClinicians / Practitioners |
All Organisations
Fireside Project
Nonprofit organization operating the Psychedelic Peer Support Line, providing phone and text support during and after psychedelic experiences with escalation to emergency services where needed.
ICEERS
ICEERS is a Spain-based nonprofit focused on the globalization of Indigenous plant medicines, with work spanning education, research, legal support, and community services. Its website describes three connected areas of work: mitigating harms and consequences, co-creating collaborative pathways, and international monitoring and research. The organization serves people navigating psychoactive plant use, health professionals, and Indigenous and community partners across multiple countries. In psychedelic and drug policy work, ICEERS combines harm reduction, public education, and policy advocacy rather than operating as a patient-access organization. Its current public-facing services include free integration and crisis support through El Faro, a drug-interaction information service, educational resources, and legal defense support for people facing prosecution related to traditional medicines. ICEERS also reports work with Indigenous partners and claims its efforts have informed court rulings and public policy, making it relevant to researchers, clinicians, funders, policy groups, and community stakeholders seeking evidence, safety, and rights-based collaboration.