4.5 Article

Psilocybin-assisted psychotherapy for treatment-resistant depression: Which psychotherapy?

Journal

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/inm.13214

Keywords

depression; mental health nursing; psilocybin; psychedelics; psychotherapy; treatment-resistant depression

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This perspective paper discusses the selection of psychotherapy for psilocybin-assisted psychotherapy in treating treatment-resistant depression. Evidence supports the use of certain psychotherapies for treatment-resistant depression, as well as the efficacy of psilocybin. The paper aims to identify psychotherapies that align with the psilocybin experience and examines their congruence through qualitative analysis. The findings suggest that interpersonal psychotherapy and intensive short-term dynamic psychotherapy are compatible with the psilocybin experience.
This perspective paper explores the choice of psychotherapy for psilocybin-assisted psychotherapy for treatment-resistant depression. There is evidence to support the use of some psychotherapies in treating 'treatment-resistant' depression, and emerging evidence for the efficacy of psilocybin. The next step which is the focus of this paper is to identify psychotherapies that are both effective and congruent with the psilocybin experience. The evidence for the efficacy of the psychotherapies is drawn from a Cochrane review and the analysis of their congruence with the psilocybin experience is drawn from a qualitative meta-synthesis of the experience of psilocybin. The paper will examine whether three one-to-one psychotherapies identified as effective in the treatment of treatment-resistant depression are compatible with the psilocybin experience. Each psychotherapy will be examined in relation to its congruence with the qualitative evidence that suggests the choice of psychotherapy needs to give priority to the subjective experience, facilitate emotional processing, support connectedness with others, acceptance of the self as emotional and support change based on the person's insights into their relationships with others and the world in which they live. We conclude that interpersonal psychotherapy and intensive short-term dynamic psychotherapy align with that experience, although others are currently being trialled.

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