Beyond matters of competency and preference, perhaps the biggest argument for implementing AI into the field of tripsitting is cost, and more broadly, access.
Cost
Currently, it can cost anything upwards of £1,000 for a single psychedelic session with proper screening and adequate preparation with a qualified therapist. This puts it out of reach for many people and has created something of a class divide in psychedelic therapy.
In psychedelics and psychedelic-assisted therapy, we may have an incredible tool for healing, insight, and personal growth, something that can help with all types of mental health conditions – anxiety, depression, PTSD, OCD, and more. For this reason, it has been called ‘the future of mental health’ by many experts in the field. In a world where there is a global mental health epidemic, such a seemingly Swiss Army knife could be truly revolutionary.
However, because of the current cost issue, it’s limited to people from a certain financial class. The obvious problem here is that mental health issues affect people from all walks of life, not only those with money. If you’re working class, on benefits, or struggling to pay rent, then realistically, you’re priced out. The people who might stand to benefit the most from psychedelics just can’t afford them. If you think about a single mother working two jobs, a student with £30k in debt, or someone on disability benefits, a £3,000 therapy session isn’t a bit expensive; it’s simply not feasible.
The psychedelic community loves talking about unity, oneness, and breaking down barriers. But we currently operate with a system where this work is almost something of a luxury service for rich people. That seems to be the opposite of what these medicines are supposed to be about.
AI could potentially be a total game-changer. The computational cost of running an AI session is pennies compared to paying a human professional for 6-8 hours. This means potentially dropping costs from thousands of pounds to a few pounds, maybe less. That’s not just a nice discount; that could take psychedelic therapy from being elite healthcare to genuinely accessible for all. Imagine someone in rural Wales, Mumbai, or São Paulo, all being able to access the same quality of preparation and integration support as someone paying thousands in central London. That’s what democratized access actually means.
Geographical and Cultural Barriers
Psychedelic access is limited by more than just money.
It is limited by location, too. Most tripsitters are concentrated in wealthy big cities, in first-world, English-speaking countries. There are many reasons for this, which are beyond the scope of this article, but this fact remains, and it is a huge barrier when we consider global access to psychedelic medicine. AI only requires a decent internet connection, something that is accessible to a considerably larger percentage of the global population.
Beyond financial cost and geographical barriers, there are also cultural barriers to human trip sitters. Less than 20% of the global population speaks English, which makes the current batch of trip sitters pretty much useless for comprehensive support for the rest. Beyond language, there are also some people who might have had bad experiences with healthcare or come from cultures or communities where mental health support is stigmatised. In these cases, people might actually feel more comfortable with an AI than a human stranger.
Again, these barriers to access effectively disappear with AI. We’ve seen this type of transformation with technology before. Telemedicine brought healthcare to remote areas. Online therapy made mental health support far more accessible. And the internet and educational apps democratised learning. AI trip sitting could do the same for consciousness work; taking something that was once exclusive and making it universal.
With AI as a tripsitter as compared to a human, it seems there is a far greater potential for someone with trauma or depression to be able to access proper preparation, safe session support, and integration, regardless of their bank account, postcode, or cultural background. This would mean psychedelic support would become more accessible by a multitude of thousands from where it is today. This could mean real democratised psychedelic support and a true revolution in the field of mental health.
share your toughts
Join the Conversation.