Английская Википедия:Bad trip

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Версия от 08:11, 5 февраля 2024; EducationBot (обсуждение | вклад) (Новая страница: «{{Английская Википедия/Панель перехода}} {{short description|Unpleasant experience triggered by psychoactive drugs}} {{Other uses|Bad Trip (disambiguation){{!}}Bad Trip}} {{Psychedelic sidebar |expanded=Effects}} A '''bad trip''' (also known as '''challenging experiences''', '''acute intoxication from hallucinogens''', '''psychedelic crisis''', or '''emergence phenomenon''') is a term describing an acute adverse psychologica...»)
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Шаблон:Short description Шаблон:Other uses Шаблон:Psychedelic sidebar A bad trip (also known as challenging experiences, acute intoxication from hallucinogens, psychedelic crisis, or emergence phenomenon) is a term describing an acute adverse psychological reaction to effects produced under the influence of psychoactive substances, namely hallucinogens. With proper screening, preparation, and support in a regulated setting these are usually benign.[1] A bad trip on psilocybin, for instance, often features intense anxiety, confusion, agitation, and psychosis.[2] They manifest as a range of feelings, such as anxiety, paranoia, the unshakeable sense of one's inevitable and imminent personal demise or states of unrelieved terror that they believe will persist after the substance's effects have worn off. As of 2011, exact data on the frequency of bad trips are not available.[2]

Bad trips can be exacerbated by the inexperience or irresponsibility of the user or the lack of proper preparation and environment for the trip, and are often reflective of unresolved psychological tensions triggered during the course of the experience.[3]Шаблон:Page needed In clinical research settings, precautions including the screening and preparation of participants, the training of the session monitors who will be present during the experience, and the selection of appropriate physical setting can minimize the likelihood of psychological distress.[4] Researchers have suggested that the presence of professional "trip sitters" (i.e., session monitors) may significantly reduce the negative experiences associated with a bad trip.[5] In most cases in which anxiety arises during a supervised psychedelic experience, reassurance from the session monitor is adequate to resolve it; however, if distress becomes intense it can be treated pharmacologically, for example with the benzodiazepine diazepam.[4]

The psychiatrist Stanislav Grof wrote that unpleasant psychedelic experiences are not necessarily unhealthy or undesirable, arguing that they may have the potential for psychological healing and lead to breakthrough and resolution of unresolved psychic issues.[3]Шаблон:Page needed Drawing on narrative theory, the authors of a 2021 study of 50 users of psychedelics found that many described bad trips as having been sources of insight or even turning points in life.[5]

Intervention

Medical treatment consists of supportive therapy and minimization of external stimuli. In some cases, sedation is used when necessary to control self-destructive behavior, or when hyperthermia occurs. Diazepam is the most frequently used sedative for such treatment, but other benzodiazepines such as lorazepam are also effective.Шаблон:Citation needed Such sedatives will only decrease fear and anxiety, but will not subdue hallucinations. In severe cases, antipsychotics such as haloperidol can reduce or stop hallucinations. Haloperidol is effective against acute intoxication caused by LSD and other tryptamines, amphetamines, ketamine, and phencyclidine.[6][7]

Effects

Bad trips may cause hallucinogen persisting perception disorder (HPPD).[8]

Perspectives

Stanislav Grof

Psychiatrist Stanislav Grof once said in an interview:

Шаблон:Blockquote

In a 1975 book, Grof suggested that painful and difficult experiences during a trip could be a result of the mind reliving experiences associated with birth, and that experiences of imprisonment, eschatological terror, or suffering far beyond anything imaginable in a normal state, if seen through to conclusion, often resolve into emotional, intellectual and spiritual breakthroughs. From this perspective, Grof suggests that interrupting a bad trip, while initially seen as beneficial, could potentially trap the tripper in unresolved psychological states. Grof also suggests that many cathartic experiences within psychedelic states, while not necessarily crises, may be the effects of consciousness entering a perinatal space.[9]

Rick Strassman

Professor of psychiatry Rick Strassman is critical of reframing the experience of bad trips as one of "challenging experiences".[10]

See also

References

Шаблон:Reflist

External links

Шаблон:Medical resources

Шаблон:Psychoactive substance use