| Literature DB >> 34053342 |
Pedro J Teixeira1,2, Matthew W Johnson3, Christopher Timmermann4, Rosalind Watts2, David Erritzoe4, Hannah Douglass4, Hannes Kettner4, Robin L Carhart-Harris4.
Abstract
Healthful behaviours such as maintaining a balanced diet, being physically active and refraining from smoking have major impacts on the risk of developing cancer, diabetes, cardiovascular diseases and other serious conditions. The burden of the so-called 'lifestyle diseases'-in personal suffering, premature mortality and public health costs-is considerable. Consequently, interventions designed to promote healthy behaviours are increasingly being studied, e.g., using psychobiological models of behavioural regulation and change. In this article, we explore the notion that psychedelic substances such as psilocybin could be used to assist in promoting positive lifestyle change conducive to good overall health. Psilocybin has a low toxicity, is non-addictive and has been shown to predict favourable changes in patients with depression, anxiety and other conditions marked by rigid behavioural patterns, including substance (mis)use. While it is still early days for modern psychedelic science, research is advancing fast and results are promising. Here we describe psychedelics' proposed mechanisms of action and research findings pertinent to health behaviour change science, hoping to generate discussion and new research hypotheses linking the two areas. Therapeutic models including psychedelic experiences and common behaviour change methods (e.g., Cognitive Behaviour Therapy, Motivational Interviewing) are already being tested for addiction and eating disorders. We believe this research may soon be extended to help promote improved diet, exercise, nature exposure and also mindfulness or stress reduction practices, all of which can contribute to physical and psychological health and well-being.Entities:
Keywords: Psilocybin; interventions; public health; serotonin; therapy
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2021 PMID: 34053342 PMCID: PMC8801670 DOI: 10.1177/02698811211008554
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Psychopharmacol ISSN: 0269-8811 Impact factor: 4.153
Conceptual definitions of the three psychological needs from self-determination theory.
| Psychological need | Conceptual definition |
|---|---|
| Autonomy | The psychological need to experience self-direction and personal endorsement in the initiation and regulation of one’s behaviour. The hallmarks of autonomy need satisfaction are volitional action and wholehearted self-endorsement (i.e., personal ownership) of that action. |
| Competence | The psychological need to be effective in one’s interactions with the environment. It reflects the desire to extend one’s capacities and skills and, in doing so, to seek out optimal challenges, take them on, and exert effort and strategic thinking until personal growth is experienced. |
| Relatedness | The psychological need to establish close emotional bonds and attachments with other people. It reflects the desire to be emotionally connected to and interpersonally involved in warm relationships. The hallmarks of relatedness need satisfaction are feeling socially connected and being actively engaged in both the giving and receiving of care and benevolence to the significant people in one’s life. |
Conceptual definitions are based on Ryan and Deci (2017).