Certificate in Psychedelic Assisted Therapy: Difference between revisions
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The provision of a supportive therapeutic setting prior to, during, and following drug administration is now the standard of care in the majority of uses of psychedelic medications for the treatment of psychiatric disorders. To fill this requirement, a variety of psychedelic-assisted | The provision of a supportive therapeutic setting prior to, during, and following drug administration is now the standard of care in the majority of uses of psychedelic medications for the treatment of psychiatric disorders. To fill this requirement, a variety of psychedelic-assisted therapy (PAT) models and certifications (CPAT) have been developed. By comparing and contrasting each offering a new [[Open Source Psychedelic-Assisted Therapy]] has been developed. | ||
=== Clinician Background === | |||
Personal exposure to altered states of consciousness has been hypothesised to strengthen PAP therapists' capacity to help patients by better acquainting them with the subjective experiences those patients could encounter during psychedelic medicine sessions.<ref>Psychedelics as a training experience for psychedelic therapists: drawing on history to inform current practice. Nielson, E. M. (2021). ''J. Humanist. Psychol.'' doi: 10.1177/00221678211021204</ref> | |||
=== CPAT Content === | === CPAT Content === |
Revision as of 08:24, 9 August 2022
The provision of a supportive therapeutic setting prior to, during, and following drug administration is now the standard of care in the majority of uses of psychedelic medications for the treatment of psychiatric disorders. To fill this requirement, a variety of psychedelic-assisted therapy (PAT) models and certifications (CPAT) have been developed. By comparing and contrasting each offering a new Open Source Psychedelic-Assisted Therapy has been developed.
Clinician Background
Personal exposure to altered states of consciousness has been hypothesised to strengthen PAP therapists' capacity to help patients by better acquainting them with the subjective experiences those patients could encounter during psychedelic medicine sessions.[1]
CPAT Content
All PAP models contain three phases[2]. Preparation sessions make up the first stage and are intended to get individuals ready to benefit from the medication. The second stage of therapy is referred to as the medicine session(s), which refers to the period when medication is administered. The third phase, often known as "integration"[3] involves a process of reflection on the medicine session and how it could motivate cognitive and behavioural changes that last after the course of therapy.
References
- ↑ Psychedelics as a training experience for psychedelic therapists: drawing on history to inform current practice. Nielson, E. M. (2021). J. Humanist. Psychol. doi: 10.1177/00221678211021204
- ↑ The Psychotherapeutic Framing of Psychedelic Drug Administration. Front. Psychol., Sec. Psychology for Clinical Settings. Published: 02 June 2022, accessed on 9th August 2022 via: https://doi.org/10.3389/fpsyg.2022.866018
- ↑ Psychedelic harm reduction and integration: a transtheoretical model for clinical practice. Gorman, I., Nielson, E. M., Molinar, A., Cassidy, K., and Sabbagh, J. (2021). Front. Psychol. 12:645246. doi: 10.3389/fpsyg.2021.645246