| Literature DB >> 36001643 |
Mary M Sweeney1, Sandeep Nayak1, Ethan S Hurwitz1, Lisa N Mitchell1, T Cody Swift1, Roland R Griffiths1,2.
Abstract
Both psychedelic drug experiences and near-death experiences can occasion changes in perspectives on death and dying, but there have been few direct comparisons of these phenomena. This study directly compared psychedelic occasioned and non-drug experiences which altered individuals' beliefs about death. Individuals who reported an experience that altered their beliefs about death occasioned by either a psychedelic drug or a near-death or other non-ordinary experience completed an online survey. Circumstances of the experience, mystical and near-death subjective features, changes in attitudes about death, and other persisting effects were evaluated. The study sample (n = 3192) included five groups: non-drug near-death or other non-ordinary experiences (n = 933), and drug experiences occasioned by lysergic acid diethylamide (LSD) (n = 904), psilocybin (n = 766), ayahuasca (n = 282), or N,N-dimethyltryptamine (DMT) (n = 307). Analyses of differences in experiences were adjusted statistically for demographic differences between groups. Compared to the psychedelic groups, the non-drug group was more likely to report being unconscious, clinically dead, and that their life was in imminent danger. The groups were remarkably similar in the reported changes in death attitudes attributed to the experience, including a reduced fear of death and high ratings of positive persisting effects and personal meaning, spiritual significance, and psychological insight. Although both psychedelic and non-drug participants showed robust increases on standardized measures of mystical and near-death experiences, these measures were significantly greater in the psychedelic participants. Non-drug participants were more likely to rate their experiences as the single most meaningful of their lives. Comparing across psychedelic substances, ayahuasca and DMT groups tended report stronger and more positive enduring consequences of the experience than the psilocybin and LSD groups, which were largely indistinguishable. These data provide a detailed characterization and comparison of psychedelic occasioned and non-drug experiences that changed attitudes about death and suggest the importance of future prospective psychedelic administration studies.Entities:
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2022 PMID: 36001643 PMCID: PMC9401141 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0271926
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.752
Participant characteristics in the Non-Drug Group and combined Psychedelic Group.
| Non-Drug | Psychedelic | ||
|---|---|---|---|
| Mean age at study participation in years (SD) | 55.2 (13.5) | 31.7 (13.5) | ≤.001 |
| Mean age at time of experience in years (SD) | 32.0 (16.4) | 25.0 (9.5) | ≤.001 |
| Sex (%) | ≤.001 | ||
| Male | 32% | 78% | |
| Female | 68% | 22% | |
| Race (%) | ns | ||
| White | 89% | 84% | |
| More than one race | 6% | 10% | |
| Asian | 2% | 4% | |
| Native American | 1% | 2% | |
| African American/Black | 2% | <1% | |
| Native Hawaiian or Pacific Islander | <1% | <1% | |
| Ethnicity (% Hispanic) | 7% | 10% | ≤.001 |
| Education (%) | ≤.001 | ||
| Less than a Bachelor’s Degree | 46% | 57% | |
| Bachelor’s Degree or higher | 54% | 43% | |
| Annual household income (%) | ≤.001 | ||
| Less than $50,000 | 42% | 53% | |
| $50,000 or more | 58% | 47% | |
| Relationship Status (%) | ≤.001 | ||
| Never married | 16% | 54% | |
| Living with partner | 9% | 19% | |
| Married | 45% | 19% | |
| Divorced or separated | 22% | 7% | |
| Widowed | 8% | <1% | |
| Country of Residence (%) | ≤.001 | ||
| United States | 69% | 61% | |
| United Kingdom | 9% | 7% | |
| Canada | 8% | 6% | |
| Australia | 5% | 4% | |
| Other (%) | 10% | 21% |
1 Demographic characteristics (except age) were dichotomized and compared between Non-Drug Group and Psychedelic Group using Chi-square; age was compared using independent samples t tests.
2 p ≤0.001 indicates a significant difference between groups.
3 Proportion White relative to other categories combined.
4 Proportion never married relative to all other categories.
5 Proportion residing in the United States relative to all other countries combined.
Participant characteristics for Non-Drug, Psilocybin, LSD, Ayahuasca, and DMT groups,.
| Non-Drug | Psilocybin | LSD | Ayahuasca | DMT | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Mean age at study participation in years (SD) | 55.2 (13.5) |
|
|
|
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| Mean age at time of experience in years (SD) | 32.0 (16.4) |
|
| 34.6 (11.0)c |
|
| Sex (% male) | 32% |
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|
|
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| Race (% White) | 89% | 86%a | 84%a | 83%a | 83%a |
| Ethnicity (% Hispanic) | 7% | 9%a | 11%a | 13%a | 9%a |
| Education (% Bachelor’s Degree or higher) | 54% |
|
| 62%b |
|
| Annual household income (% less than $50,000) | 42% |
|
| 47%b |
|
| Relationship Status (% never married) | 16% |
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| Country of Residence (% United States) | 69% | 62%a | 68%a |
| 63%a |
1 Dichotomous demographic variables were analyzed with a general linear model with a logit link. Age was analyzed with ANOVA. Pairwise comparisons among groups were adjusted using Bonferroni method to control for Type I error.
2 Bold font = significant difference from the Non-Drug Group (p≤0.001); drug groups not sharing a common letter are significantly different (p≤0.001).
Circumstances of the experience in the Non-Drug Group and the Psychedelic Group.
| Non-Drug | Psychedelic | Regression Analyses | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|
|
| ||||
| Duration of Experience (%) | ||||
| Five minutes or less | 40% |
| 0.15 | ≤.001 |
| Between 5 minutes and 1 hour | 29% | 27% | 0.87 | ns |
| 1 hour or more | 31% |
| 4.00 | ≤.001 |
| Medically unconscious at any time during the experience (i.e., completely unresponsive to verbal or physical stimuli) (%) | 36% |
| 0.15 | ≤.001 |
| Clinically dead (i.e., cessation of breath, heart function) (%) | 21% |
| 0.01 | ≤.001 |
| Medical professional confirmed to be clinically dead (%) | 11% |
| 0.004 | ≤.001 |
| Imminent Danger (%) | ||||
| Life was in danger and believed it to be at the time | 28% |
| 0.40 | ≤.001 |
| Life was in danger but did not believe it to be at the time | 19% |
| 0.41 | ≤.001 |
| Life was not in danger but believed it to be at the time | 6% |
| 2.11 | ≤.001 |
| Life was not in danger and did not believe it to be at the time | 48% |
| 5.77 | ≤.001 |
1 Each row presents an individual logistic regression analysis for each outcome with group as a factor while controlling for demographic variables as described in text. Coefficients for group are presented as odds ratio (OR).
2 Bold font data in the Psychedelic Group indicates a significant difference from Non-Drug Group (p≤0.001).
Circumstances of the experience in the Non-Drug, Psilocybin, LSD, Ayahuasca, and DMT groups,.
| Non-Drug | Psilocybin | LSD | Ayahuasca | DMT | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Duration of Experience (%) | |||||
| Five minutes or less | 40% |
|
|
|
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| Between 5 minutes and 1 hour | 29% | 23%a | 20%a | 21%a |
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| 1 hour or more | 31% |
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|
| 23%b |
| Medically unconscious at any time during the experience (i.e., completely unresponsive to verbal or physical stimuli) (%) | 36% |
|
|
| 31%b |
| Clinically dead (i.e., cessation of breath, heart function) (%) | 21% |
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|
|
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| Medical professional confirmed to be clinically dead (%) | 11% |
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|
|
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| Imminent Danger (%) | |||||
| Life was in danger and believed it to be at the time | 28% |
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|
|
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| Life was in danger but did not believe it to be at the time | 19% |
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|
|
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| Life was not in danger but believed it to be at the time | 6% | 20%a | 21%a |
| 19%a |
| Life was not in danger and did not believe it to be at the time | 48% |
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|
|
1 Comparisons between drug groups were made using general linear model with a logit link and Type III sums of squares including covariates as described in text; pairwise comparisons were adjusted using the Bonferroni method to control for Type I error rate.
2 Bold font = significant difference from the Non-Drug Group (p≤0.001); drug groups not sharing a common letter are significantly different (p≤0.001).
Mystical-type and other subjective features of the experience among the Psychedelic Group and the Non-Drug Group.
| Non-Drug | Psychedelic | Regression Analyses | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Mystical Experience Questionnaire (MEQ30) | ||||
| Mean proportion of max scores for each factor and total (SD) |
| |||
| Mystical | .67 (.29) |
| .71 | ≤.001 |
| Positive mood | .70 (.29) |
| .45 | ≤.001 |
| Transcendence of time and space | .62 (.33) |
| .39 | ≤.001 |
| Ineffability | .78 (.27) |
| .27 | ≤.001 |
| Total Score | .68 (.27) |
| .65 | ≤.001 |
| Percent fulfilling criteria for complete mystical experience |
| |||
| Complete mystical experience | 47% |
| 2.08 | ≤.001 |
| Mean proportion of max scores for each subscale and total (SD) |
| p | ||
| Cognitive | .38 (.28) |
| .60 | ≤.001 |
| Affective | .58 (.34) |
| .50 | ≤.001 |
| Paranormal | .38 (.25) |
| .30 | ≤.001 |
| Transcendental | .42 (.32) | .34 (.30) | -.12 | ns |
| Total Score | .44 (.23) |
| .42 | ≤.001 |
| States of Consciousness Questionnaire Items (SOCQ) | ||||
| Mean score for each item (range: 0 = none/not at all; 5 = extreme) (SD) |
| |||
| Feeling of being reborn | 1.83 (2.06) |
| .36 | ≤.001 |
| Convincing feeling of reliving biological birth | 0.47 (1.26) |
| .25 | ≤.001 |
| Reliving of situations and events from your childhood | 0.96 (1.73) |
| .20 | ≤.001 |
| Déjà vu (experienced exact situation, but no real memory of it) | 0.90 (1.42) |
| .19 | ≤.001 |
| Convincing feelings of reliving a previous incarnation | 0.86 (1.70) | 1.14 (1.70) | .14 | ns |
| Profound experience of your own death | 2.05 (2.12) | 2.54 (2.02) | .09 | ns |
| Convincing feeling of obtaining information in an extrasensory manner | 2.72 (2.21) |
| -.27 | ≤.001 |
| Convincing feeling of contact with people who have died | 2.26 (2.25) |
| -.44 | ≤.001 |
| Percent endorsing an encounter with “God” |
| |||
| Encountered something that someone might call “God” | 48% |
| 1.73 |
|
1 Each row presents an individual regression analysis for each outcome with group as a factor while controlling for demographic variables as described in text. Coefficients for group are presented as standardized β for linear regressions and odds ratio (OR) for logistic regressions.
2 Bold font = group significant factor in regression analysis at p ≤.001.
Mystical-type and other subjective features of the experience among the Non-Drug, Psilocybin, LSD, Ayahuasca, and DMT groups,.
| Non-Drug | Psilocybin | LSD | Ayahuasca | DMT | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| n = 904 | n = 282 | n = 307 | |||
| Mystical Experience Questionnaire (MEQ30) | |||||
| Mean proportion of max scores for each factor and total (SD) | |||||
| Mystical | .67 (.29) |
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| Positive mood | .70 (.29) |
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| Transcendence of time and space | .62 (.33) |
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| Ineffability | .78 (.27) | .83 (.19)a | .84 (.18)a |
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| Total Score | .68 (.26) |
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| Percent fulfilling criteria for complete mystical experience | |||||
| Complete mystical experience | 47% |
| 48%a |
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| Near-Death Experience Questionnaire (Greyson NDE Scale) | |||||
| Mean proportion of max scores for each factor and total (SD) | |||||
| Cognitive | .38 (.28) |
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| Affective | .58 (.34) |
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| Paranormal | .38 (.25) |
| .44 (.22)a |
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| Transcendental | .42 (.32) |
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| Total Score | .44 (.23) |
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| States of Consciousness Questionnaire Items (SOCQ) | |||||
| Mean score for each item (range 0 none/not at all—5 extreme) (SD) | |||||
| Feeling of being reborn | 1.83 (2.06) |
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| Convincing feeling of reliving biological birth | 0.47 (1.26) | 0.84 (1.48)a | 0.76 (1.43)a |
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| Reliving of situations and events from your childhood | 0.96 (1.73) | 1.56 (1.73)a | 1.51 (1.73)a |
| 0.87 (1.51)c |
| Déjà vu (experienced exact situation, but no real memory of it) | 0.90 (1.42) | 1.37 (1.44)a | 1.43 (1.47)a | 1.32 (1.53)a |
|
| Convincing feelings of reliving a previous incarnation | 0.86 (1.70) | 1.06 (1.61)a | 1.51 (1.74)a | 1.35 (1.83)a | 1.09 (1.68)a |
| Profound experience of your own death | 2.05 (2.12) | 2.41 (2.0)a | 2.44 (2.05)a | 2.79 (1.98)a | 2.93 (1.99)a |
| Convincing feeling of obtaining information in an extrasensory manner | 2.72 (2.21) |
|
| 2.34 (2.00)b |
|
| Convincing feeling of contact with people who have died | 2.26 (2.25) |
|
| 1.73 (1.96)b |
|
| Percent endorsing an encounter with “God” | |||||
| Encountered something that someone might call “God” | 48% | 54%a | 49%a |
|
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1 Comparisons between drug groups for dichotomous outcomes were made using general linear model with a logit link and Type III sums of squares including covariates as described in text; continuous data were analyzed using ANOVA with the same covariates and Type III Sums of Squares; pairwise comparisons were adjusted using the Bonferroni method to control for Type I error rate.
2 Bold font = significant difference from the Non-Drug Group (p≤0.001); drug groups not sharing a common letter are significantly different (p≤0.001).
Changes in death attitudes attributed to the experience among the Psychedelic Group and the Non-Drug Group.
| Non-Drug | Psychedelic | Regression Analyses | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Changes in fear of death (%) |
| |||
| Decreased fear of death | 88% | 89% | 1.29 | ns |
| Increased fear of death | 5% | 6% | 0.53 | ns |
| Curiosity or interest in death (%) |
| |||
| Positive, desirable change | 84% | 82% | 0.82 | ns |
| Negative, detrimental change | 2% | 2% | 0.49 | ns |
| Attitudes about death of others (%) |
| |||
| Positive, desirable change | 87% | 85% | 1.26 | ns |
| Negative, detrimental change | 3% | 2% | 0.43 | ns |
| Attitudes about own death (%) |
| |||
| Positive, desirable change | 90% | 92% | 1.35 | ns |
| Negative, detrimental change | 3% | 3% | 0.40 | ns |
| Death Attitudes Profile | ||||
| Mean change score3 for each factor (SD) |
| |||
| Fear of death (e.g., “I have an intense fear of death.”) | -2.32 (1.80) | -2.13 (1.66) | .08 | ns |
| Neutral acceptance (e.g., “Death is neither good nor bad.”) | 0.95 (1.22) | 0.90 (1.03) | -.11 | ns |
| Death avoidance (e.g., “I avoid death thoughts at all costs.”) | -2.01 (1.86) |
| .26 | ≤.001 |
| Approach acceptance (e.g., “I look forward to life after death.”) | 1.13 (1.46) |
| -.36 | ≤.001 |
| Escape acceptance (e.g., “I see death as a relief from the burden of this life.”) | 0.27 (1.65) |
| -.34 | ≤.001 |
1 Each row presents an individual regression analysis for each outcome with group as a factor while controlling for demographic variables as described in text. Coefficients for group are presented as standardized β for linear regressions and odds ratio (OR) for logistic regressions.
2 Bold font = group significant factor in regression analysis at p ≤.001.
3 Participants rated attitudes before and after the experience on a 7-point Likert scale; negative change scores indicate a decrease in the rating on that scale from before to after and positive change scores indicate an increase from before to after.
Changes in death attitudes attributed to the experience among the Non-Drug, Psilocybin, LSD, Ayahuasca, and DMT groups,.
| Non-Drug | Psilocybin | LSD | Ayahuasca | DMT | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Changes in fear of death (%) | |||||
| Decreased fear of death | 88% | 91%a | 86%a | 90%a | 90%a |
| Increased fear of death | 5% | 6%a | 8%a | 5%a | 5%a |
| Curiosity or interest in death (%) | |||||
| Positive, desirable change | 84% | 84%a | 80%a | 84%a | 81%a |
| Negative, detrimental change | 2% | 2%a | 3%a | 2%a | 2%a |
| Attitudes about death of others (%) | |||||
| Positive, desirable change | 87% | 86%a | 84%a | 90%a | 82%a |
| Negative, detrimental change | 3% | 2%a | 3%a | 1%a | 4%a |
| Attitudes about own death (%) | |||||
| Positive, desirable change | 90% | 92%a | 92%a | 94%a | 93%a |
| Negative, detrimental change | 3% | 2%a | 3%a | 2%a | 3%a |
| Death Attitudes Profile | |||||
| Mean change score3 for each factor (SD) | |||||
| Fear of death (e.g., “I have an intense fear of death.”) | -2.32 (1.80) | -2.13 (1.65)a | -2.14 (1.70)a | -1.97 (1.65)a | -2.21 (1.62)a |
| Neutral acceptance (e.g., “Death is neither good nor bad.”) | 0.95 (1.22) | 0.91 (1.05)a | 0.95 (1.07) a | 0.76 (.87)a | 0.87 (1.00)a |
| Death avoidance (e.g., “I avoid death thoughts at all costs.”) | -2.01 (1.86) |
|
|
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| Approach acceptance (e.g., “I look forward to life after death.”) | 1.13 (1.46) |
|
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| 0.91 (1.31)b |
| Escape acceptance (e.g., “I see death as a relief from the burden of this life.”) | 0.27 (1.65) |
|
|
| -0.30 (1.43)a |
1 Comparisons between drug groups for dichotomous outcomes were made using general linear model with a logit link and Type III sums of squares including covariates as described in text; continuous data were analyzed using ANOVA with the same covariates and Type III Sums of Squares; pairwise comparisons were adjusted using the Bonferroni method to control for Type I error rate.
2 Bold font = significant difference from the Non-Drug Group (p≤0.001); drug groups not sharing a common letter are significantly different (p≤0.001).
3 Participants rated attitudes before and after the experience on a 7-point Likert scale; negative change scores indicate a decrease in the rating on that scale from before to after and positive change scores indicate an increase from before to after.
Comparison of experience relative to other lifetime experiences among the Psychedelic Group and the Non-Drug Group.
| Non-Drug | Psychedelic | Regression Analyses | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Mean rating relative to other lifetime experiences (range 1–8) |
| |||
| How personally meaningful was the experience | 7.2 (1.1) |
| -.23 | ≤.001 |
| How spiritually significant was the experience | 7.1 (1.4) | 6.8 (1.5) | -.16 | ns |
| How personally psychologically insightful was the experience | 6.8 (1.8) | 6.7 (1.4) | -.01 | ns |
| How psychologically challenging was the experience | 5.4 (2.7) | 5.5 (2.2) | -.10 | ns |
| Percent rating the experience as top 5 most of lifetime |
| |||
| How personally meaningful was the experience | 85% | 75% | 0.66 | ns |
| How spiritually significant was the experience | 84% |
| 0.65 | ≤.001 |
| How personally psychologically insightful was the experience | 78% | 72% | 0.82 | ns |
| How psychologically challenging was the experience | 54% |
| 0.66 | ≤.001 |
| Percent rating the experience as single most of lifetime |
| |||
| How personally meaningful was the experience | 46% |
| 0.42 | ≤.001 |
| How spiritually significant was the experience | 50% |
| 0.51 | ≤.001 |
| How personally psychologically insightful was the experience | 41% |
| 0.54 | ≤.001 |
| How psychologically challenging was the experience | 28% |
| 0.44 | ≤.001 |
1 Each row presents an individual regression analysis for each outcome with group as a factor while controlling for demographic variables as described in text. Coefficients for group are presented as standardized β for linear regressions and odds ratio (OR) for logistic regressions.
2 Bold font = group significant factor in regression analysis at p ≤.001.
3 Rating options ranged from 1 = no more than routine, everyday experience; 5 = similar to experiences that occur on average once every 5 years; 6 = among the 10 most in my life; 7 = among the 5 most of my life; 8 = the single most of my life.
Comparison of experience relative to other lifetime experiences among the Non-Drug, Psilocybin, LSD, Ayahuasca, and DMT groups,.
| Non-Drug | Psilocybin | LSD | Ayahuasca | DMT | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Mean rating relative to other lifetime experiences (range 1–8) | |||||
| How personally meaningful was the experience | 7.2 (1.1) |
|
| 7.1 (1.0)b | 7.0 (.9)a,b |
| How spiritually significant was the experience | 7.1 (1.4) | 6.8 (1.5)a |
| 7.2 (1.1)b | 7.0 (1.5)a,b |
| How personally psychologically insightful was the experience | 6.8 (1.8) | 6.7 (1.3)a | 6.7 (1.4)a | 7.0 (1.2)a | 6.6 (1.6)a |
| How psychologically challenging was the experience | 5.4 (2.7) | 5.3 (2.2)a | 5.6 (2.2)a,b | 5.9 (2.2)b | 5.6 (2.2)a,b |
| Percent rating the experience as top 5 most of lifetime | |||||
| How personally meaningful was the experience | 85% |
|
| 87%b | 78%a,b |
| How spiritually significant was the experience | 84% |
|
| 87%b | 80%a,b |
| How personally psychologically insightful was the experience | 78% | 70%a | 71%a | 79%a | 70%a |
| How psychologically challenging was the experience | 54% |
| 49%a,b | 58%b |
|
| Percent rating the experience as single most of lifetime | |||||
| How personally meaningful was the experience | 46% |
|
| 34%b |
|
| How spiritually significant was the experience | 50% |
|
| 45%a | 46%a |
| How personally psychologically insightful was the experience | 41% |
|
| 34%a |
|
| How psychologically challenging was the experience | 28% |
|
| 21%a |
|
1 Comparisons between drug groups for dichotomous outcomes were made using general linear model with a logit link and Type III sums of squares including covariates as described in text; continuous data were analyzed using ANOVA with the same covariates and Type III Sums of Squares; pairwise comparisons were adjusted using the Bonferroni method to control for Type I error rate.
2 Bold font = significant difference from the Non-Drug Group (p≤0.001); drug groups not sharing a common letter are significantly different (p≤0.001).
3 Rating options ranged from 1 = no more than routine, everyday experience; 5 = similar to experiences that occur on average once every 5 years; 6 = among the 10 most in my life; 7 = among the 5 most of my life; 8 = the single most of my life.
Persisting changes attributed to the experience among the Non-Drug and Psychedelic groups.
| Non-Drug | Psychedelic | Regression Analyses | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| n = 933 | n = 2259 |
| ||
| Overall life changes (range from –3 to +3) | ||||
| Personal well-being or life satisfaction | 2.3 (1.1) |
|
| ≤.001 |
| Life’s purpose | 2.1 (1.2) | 2.0 (1.2) | .03 | ns |
| Life’s meaning | 2.1 (1.2) | 2.1 (1.1) | .04 | ns |
| Social relationships as a whole | 1.7 (1.4) | 1.7 (1.3) | .16 | ns |
| Mood | 1.7 (1.3) |
|
| ≤.001 |
| Behavioral changes | 1.7 (1.2) | 1.7 (1.2) | .10 | ns |
| How spiritual you are | 2.1 (1.2) | 2.0 (1.2) | -.15 | ns |
1 Each row presents an individual linear regression analysis for each outcome with group as a predictor while controlling for demographic variables as described in text. Coefficients for group are presented as standardized β.
2 Bold font = group significant factor in regression analysis at p ≤.001
3 Rating options ranged from -3 = Strong negative change that I consider undesirable to +3 = Strong positive change that I consider desirable, with 0 = no change.
4 The significant group effect in regression models despite similar means can be explained by the covariate adjustment for age. Age was systematically lower in the Psychedelic Group, but also associated with higher ratings of positive changes in mood and in well-being or life satisfaction. Thus, while controlling for age, participants in the Psychedelic group had significantly higher ratings of positive changes in in well-being or life satisfaction and mood.
Persisting changes attributed to the experience among the Non-Drug, Psilocybin, LSD, Ayahuasca, and DMT groups,.
| Non-Drug | Psilocybin | LSD | Ayahuasca | DMT | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Overall life changes (range from –3 to +3) | |||||
| Personal well-being or life satisfaction | 2.4 (1.3) | 2.3 (1.1)a | 2.2 (1.2)a |
| 2.4 (0.9)a |
| Life’s purpose | 2.2 (1.2) | 2.0 (1.1)a | 2.0 (1.2)a | 2.2 (1.1)a | 2.0 (1.2)a |
| Life’s meaning | 2.3 (1.2) | 2.1 (1.1)a | 2.0 (1.2)a | 2.3 (1.0)a | 2.1 (1.2)a |
| Social relationships as a whole | 1.8 (1.6) | 1.7 (1.2)a,b | 1.6 (1.4)a |
| 1.8 (1.2)a,b |
| Mood | 1.7 (1.5) | 1.7 (1.2)a,b | 1.6 (1.3)a |
| 1.8 (1.2)a,b |
| Behavioral changes | 1.8 (1.4) | 1.7 (1.2)a | 1.6 (1.2)a |
| 1.7 (1.2)a,b |
| How spiritual you are | 2.4 (1.1) | 2.0 (1.1)a |
| 2.2 (1.0)a | 2.0 (1.2)a |
1 Comparisons between drug groups were analyzed using ANOVA covariates as described in text and Type III Sums of Squares; pairwise comparisons were adjusted using the Bonferroni method to control for Type I error rate.
2 Bold font = significant difference from the Non-Drug Group (p≤0.001); drug groups not sharing a common letter are significantly different (p≤0.001)
3 Rating options ranged from -3 = Strong negative change that I consider undesirable to +3 = Strong positive change that I consider desirable, with 0 = no change.
Fig 1Similarities and differences in experiences between non-drug and psychedelic participants.
Summary of notable similarities and differences in the circumstances of the experience, the subjective features of the experience, and the persisting changes attributed to the experience between the Non-Drug Group (naturally occurring experiences) and the combined Psychedelic Group (psychedelic-occasioned experiences).