Yoel A. Behar’s research while affiliated with University of Haifa and other places

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Publications (1)


Study timeline
Recruitment and dropout flow chart
Means and confidence intervals of outcome variables pre- versus post-ayahuasca retreat. The blue line indicates pre-retreat mean scores at each prompt, and the orange line indicates post-retreat mean scores at each prompt. Vertical lines represent the 95% confidence intervals. (a) Negative affect. (b) Positive affect. (c) Mindfulness
A prospective ecological momentary assessment study of an ayahuasca retreat: exploring the salutary impact of acute psychedelic experiences on subacute affect and mindfulness skills in daily life
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January 2025

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46 Reads

Psychopharmacology

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Yoel A. Behar

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Amit Bernstein

Rationale To examine the acute effects of ayahuasca use and their relationship to sub-acute changes in affect and mindfulness in a non-clinical sample, addressing the need for a better understanding of ayahuasca’s immediate and short-term impacts as interest in its use grows. Objectives Using prospective ecological assessment, this study investigates how ayahuasca used at a 4-day retreat affects positive/negative affect and mindfulness skills in daily living compared to pre-retreat. Additionally, we explore acute psychedelic experiences during the ayahuasca retreat, assessed retrospectively 1–2 days post-retreat, as potential mechanisms for theorized effects in daily living post-retreat. Methods Thirty-six participants reported positive/negative affect and mindfulness skills three times daily for 5 days before and after the retreat. Baseline assessments included lifetime psychedelic experience, and post-retreat assessments covered acute ayahuasca experiences. Mixed-effect linear models were used to analyze the data. Results Post-retreat, we observed reduced negative affect, increased positive affect, and enhanced mindfulness skills in daily living. Ayahuasca-induced acute experiences, such as time/space transcendence, emotional breakthrough and challenging experiences predicted greater subacute positive affect. Notably, none of these experiences were linked to subacute improvements in negative affect or mindfulness. No participants showed clinically significant adverse responses post-retreat, and only 5.5% exhibited some degree of potentially clinically significant deterioration in affect. Conclusions Ayahuasca use may lead to improvement in mood and mindfulness skills, and key acute psychedelic experiences induced by ayahuasca may be important to some of these salutary effects, positive affect in particular.

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