Pre ICPR Events

About

Pre ICPR Events

About

Jules Evans

Queen Mary University of London

Speaker Bio

Jules Evans is the founder and director of the Challenging Psychedelic Experiences Project, a research and public communication project on psychedelic and ecstatic ethics, integration and harm reduction, and the editor of Ecstatic Integration, a newsletter dedicated to improving ecstatic literacy in western countries. Also a philosopher, Evans is the author of several books, including Philosophy for Life and Other Dangerous Situations (published in 27 countries and a Times book of the year) and The Art of Losing Control. His work has featured in The Times, The Economist, The Spectator, New Statesman, Aeon, BBC Radio 4, BBC 2, Audible and the Financial Times. The Challenging Psychedelic Experiences Project has been covered by media including the Daily Mail, Vice, NBC and The Telegraph.

ICPR 2024 Abstract

Extended difficulties after psychedelics and what helps people cope with them

  • There is little research on the risks and harms of psychedelics, especially the risk of extended difficulties or unwanted personality changes after psychedelics. 

  • We asked whether people ever experienced difficulties lasting longer than a day following the consumption of psychedelic drugs; if so, what sort of difficulties and what if anything helped them cope with these difficulties. 

  • We gathered quantitative and qualitative data through a mixed methods survey, analysing the types of difficulties people reported and what they found helpful in coping with them, via thematic analysis of their written responses.  

Main Findings: 

  • We received 608 responses from people who reported difficulties lasting longer than a day. 

  • A fifth of respondents said their difficulties lasted longer than a year, and a sixth said they lasted longer than three years. 

  • The most commonly reported difficulties were anxiety, social disconnection, visual distortions, existential confusion, and derealization / depersonalisation. 

  • The most commonly reported coping techniques were asking friends or loved ones for support, meditation and prayer, cognitive techniques like self-talk, and reading / journalling. Some said nothing helped. 

  • Conclusion: Psychedelics can cause unexpected and unwanted challenges and personality changes lasting weeks, months, years or decades. More work needs to be done to communicate this to the public and more research needs to be done on what helps people experiencing these difficulties. 

Evans J, Robinson OC, Argyri EK, Suseelan S, Murphy-Beiner A, McAlpine R, et al. (2023) Extended difficulties following the use of psychedelic drugs: A mixed methods study. PLoS ONE 18(10): e0293349. https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0293349

© 2007-2024 ICPR by OPEN Foundation, Amsterdam, the Netherlands
© 2007-2024 ICPR by OPEN Foundation, Amsterdam, the Netherlands
© 2007-2024 ICPR by OPEN Foundation, Amsterdam, the Netherlands