# Difficulties following naturalistic psychedelic use and associations with adverse childhood experiences

**Authors:** Michelle Olofsson, Walter Osika, Simon B. Goldberg, Peter S. Hendricks, Predrag Petrovic, Tonya White, Cecilia U.D. Stenfors, Sankalp Chaturvedi, Otto Simonsson

PMC · DOI: 10.1016/j.drugpo.2025.105105 · The International journal on drug policy · 2026-01-03

## TL;DR

Some people experience long-term difficulties after using psychedelics, and those with more childhood trauma are more likely to have these issues.

## Contribution

This study identifies a link between adverse childhood experiences and persistent difficulties following psychedelic use.

## Key findings

- 6.4% of participants reported post-acute difficulties lasting more than one day after psychedelic use.
- Individuals with ≥4 adverse childhood experiences had 2.84 times higher odds of experiencing psychedelic-related difficulties.
- General anxiety and social disconnection were the most commonly reported difficulties following psychedelic use.

## Abstract

Naturalistic psychedelic use can result in a range of difficulties that impair social, occupational, and other important areas of functioning. Yet, the prevalence, phenomenology, and etiology of these outcomes remain poorly understood. Recent qualitative research has shown that individuals with long-term difficulties after psychedelic use sometimes attribute their challenges to childhood trauma. Further studies are needed to investigate these relationships.

In this cross-sectional mixed-methods study of U.S. adults with lifetime psychedelic use (n = 3168), we examined the prevalence, duration, and nature of psychedelic-related difficulties, as well as associations with adverse childhood experiences (ACEs).

Of all participants (n = 3168), most (n = 2785, 87.9 %) reported no difficulties; 6.4 % (n = 203) reported post-acute difficulties that lasted for more than one day, and 1.3 % (n = 40) for more than one year. Among those who reported difficulties (n = 383), 47 % (n = 180) reported that their difficulties resolved in one day or less. The most frequently reported post-acute difficulties were general anxiety (33.9 %), negative changes in self-concept (25.9 %), and social disconnection (23.0 %). In covariate-adjusted regression models, 2 ACEs (aOR: 2.24, p = 0.007), 3 ACEs (aOR: 2.27, p = 0.006), and ≥4 ACEs (aOR: 2.84, p < 0.001) were associated with higher odds of psychedelic-related difficulties compared to 0 ACEs. ≥4 ACEs were also associated with higher odds of difficulties that lasted more than one day (aOR: 2.37, p = 0.015) and more than one week (aOR: 2.89, p = 0.042).

There are a range of difficulties that can follow psychedelic use and childhood adversity may represent a risk factor for persistent adverse effects.

## Full-text entities

- **Diseases:** anxiety (MESH:D001007), childhood trauma (MESH:D014947)

## Full text

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## References

77 references — full list in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12758006/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12758006