The Psychedelic Renaissance Will Stall If We Can't Solve the Therapist Bottleneck
This infographic illustrates the hypothesis that group-based psychedelic therapy can produce equivalent antidepressant outcomes to the individual model, while drastically reducing per-patient cost and therapist hours.
Every psychedelic therapy protocol requires trained therapists — typically two per session, for 6-8 hours. MDMA-assisted therapy for PTSD requires three 8-hour sessions plus preparation and integration. At scale, this is unsustainable: there aren't enough therapists, training takes years, and the cost per treatment ($10,000+) excludes most patients.
The field needs to decide: is the therapy or the molecule doing the work? If it's primarily the molecule (supported by emerging data on non-guided psychedelic use showing comparable outcomes), then we're overcomplicating it. If it's the therapeutic relationship, we need a 10x scaling solution.
Hypothesis: The current therapist-intensive model of psychedelic-assisted therapy will prove unnecessary for the majority of patients. Group-based formats (1 therapist per 4-6 participants), AI-guided integration, and peer support models will produce equivalent outcomes at 20% of the cost. The molecule is doing most of the work; the therapy is providing safety and context, not unique therapeutic input.
Prediction: A non-inferiority trial comparing individual (2 therapists, 1 patient) vs. group format (2 therapists, 6 patients) psilocybin-assisted therapy for depression will show equivalent outcomes, with the group format reducing per-patient cost by >60%.
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