Short answer: Look for an eligible professional role plus verifiable licensing language in the credentials — not every guide who offers integration is a therapist.
What "licensed" means here
A licensed therapist is a regulated mental-health professional — for example a psychologist, psychiatrist, or counsellor — who can assess risk, work with diagnosable conditions, and coordinate with medical care. That clinical scope is exactly what matters when a psychedelic experience surfaces trauma or destabilizes mood, and it is why clinician-led preparation and integration are central to formal psychedelic-assisted therapy research (Gorman et al., 2021; Mitchell et al., 2021).
Credential indicators to look for
- An eligible professional role: psychologist, psychiatrist, or counsellor.
- Recognized licensing language in their credentials, such as "Licensed," LCSW, LMFT, LPC, or your country's equivalent.
- Clarity about scope: what they do and do not treat, and when they refer out.
Why Psymerge gates this
"Therapist" is a health-critical claim. To protect users, Psymerge only lists professionals on the therapist directory when they meet a licensed-role requirement plus licensing indicators in their credentials, reviewed during onboarding. Coaches never appear on therapist surfaces, even when their bios mention healing, holistic work, or integration.
Questions worth asking a prospective therapist
- What is your license, and in which jurisdiction do you practice?
- What is your experience with psychedelic preparation and integration specifically?
- How do you handle medical risk factors and medication questions?
- What is your approach if a difficult experience or crisis arises?
The bottom line
Match the level of support to your needs, and verify credentials rather than assuming them. Browse licensed integration therapists with credentials displayed upfront, or learn more about integration therapy and how it differs from coaching.
