Psychedelics Beyond Medicine: Treatment, Enhancement, Hype, Consent, and the Limits of Medicalization

Author(s): 

Mina Caraccio, Katherine Cheung, Sebastian Porsdam Mann, Lori Bruce, Edward Jacobs, Daniel VAilliger, Julian Sandbrink, Christopher Register, Ivar R. Hannikainen, Mette Leonard Høeg, Sean Clancy, Khaleel Rjwani, Emma C. Gordon, Giovanni Spitale, Neil Levy, Keisha Ray, Yuria Celidwen, Ilina Singh, Julian Savulescu, David Bryce Yaden, and Brian D. Earp

ISPS ID: 
isps25-55
Full citation: 
Caraccio, M., Cheung, K., Porsdam Mann, S., Bruce, L., Jacobs, E., Villiger, D., … Earp, B. D. (2025). Psychedelics beyond medicine: Treatment, enhancement, hype, consent, and the limits of medicalization. Philosophical Psychology, 1–44. https://doi.org/10.1080/09515089.2025.2532761
Abstract: 
The current revival of interest in classic psychedelics and other psychoactives such as ketamine and MDMA, coupled with changes to their regulatory status in many jurisdictions, necessitates rigorous ethical guidelines both within and beyond clinical and scientific contexts. This paper examines crucial ethical, philosophical, and policy considerations needed to ensure psychedelic use across various settings remains equitable, beneficial, consensual, and safe, with appropriate accountability mechanisms for addressing potential harms. We seek to broaden the lens beyond the medical model of psychedelics to include potentially valuable non-medical applications that could benefit individuals, communities, and society. With popular interest in psychedelics growing outside of therapeutic and research settings, there is a need to determine which aspects of any proffered guidelines, or underlying principles, should be applied similarly across contexts and in what ways there should be flexibility and/or context-sensitivity in their interpretation or application. In developing such guidelines, we suggest the “treatment versus enhancement” distinction – and associated debates familiar from bioethics and philosophy of medicine – requires renewed attention. We argue that neglecting non-medical and broad scientific use cases for psychedelics may have important implications for a range of ethical issues surrounding psychedelic use and research, including concerns about psychedelic hype and exceptionalism (both positive and negative), therapeutic touch, informed consent, data-gathering, and balancing access and safety. We conclude with suggestions for future directions in research and policy in the burgeoning area of psychedelic bioethics, stressing the importance of incorporating the perspectives of a diversity of stakeholders and fostering cross-sector collaboration.
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2025
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