For Psychedelic Professionals

Integration doesn’t fail in the session.
It fails in the system around it.

I help psychedelic clinics design integration systems that support clients between sessions—where real change happens.


How I Help You Support Your Clients Beyond The Session

These aren’t just email sequences—they’re trust-building tools designed to support your clients before, during, and after their healing journey.

Map the Client Journey

We map the full client experience—from preparation through long-term integration—to identify where clients feel supported and where they fall through the cracks.

Build Integration Pathways

We design structured support between sessions, giving clients clear guidance during the most vulnerable and transformative period after the experience.

Support Real-Life Change

We create systems that help clients carry insights into daily life—through consistent touchpoints, reflection, and reinforcement beyond the therapy room.

Why Systems Matter Between Sessions

There’s no consistent model for integration across the field. Each clinic—and often each therapist—approaches it differently, while clients return from powerful experiences into complex lives. This creates an expectation that a single provider can hold a process that extends far beyond the session.The result is a mismatch: therapists are asked to provide continuity they may not have the structure to sustain, and clients are left to carry insight forward on their own. Systems introduce that continuity through timing, touchpoints, and pathways that support change as it unfolds in real life.


Who Is This For

✔️ Psychedelic therapists & facilitators
✔️ Coaches integrating psychedelics into their practice
✔️ Retreat leaders & healing guides
✔️ Clinics and platforms in the psychedelic space

How I Think About Integration Systems

My approach draws from medical and behavioral care models, current psychedelic research, and conversations with clinics in the field. I’m interested in what actually helps support change beyond the session: where clients lose momentum, where therapists get overloaded, and where a clinic’s current model may not be built to hold what integration really requires.That can translate into concrete systems like post-session check-in pathways, structured communication between sessions, integration timelines, therapist support tools, referral and handoff models, or scalable touchpoints that reduce the burden on any one provider. The goal is not to add more noise, but to help clinics build support that is more realistic, continuous, and better aligned with how change actually unfolds.


How Integration System Design Works

A structured process for identifying gaps, designing support, and building more realistic continuity between sessions.

🧠 Step 1: Assess the Current Model

I start by looking at how your clinic currently supports clients before, during, and after the session—so we can identify where continuity is strong, where it breaks down, and where the burden is falling on individual providers.

✍️ Step 2: Identify the Gaps

Next, we pinpoint moments most vulnerable to drop-off, confusion, or overload. This might include unclear follow-up, limited between-session structure, therapist bottlenecks, or lack of support for real-life implementation.

💻 Step 3: Design the System

From there, I help shape practical supports that fit your setting, such as post-session check-ins, integration timelines, between-session communication, therapist support tools, or referral and handoff pathways.

📈 Step 4: Build for Real Life

The goal is to create a system that is not only thoughtful, but usable—something your team can realistically sustain and your clients can actually engage with as change unfolds over time.

Let’s Strengthen What Happens Between Sessions

If you’re thinking more seriously about continuity of care, integration support, or the limits of your current model, I’d be happy to talk and see how I can help.

About Alexa Julianne

Alexa is an integration systems strategist with a background in clinical science and clinical research. She began her career in clinical diagnostics before joining Lykos Therapeutics, where she worked as a Clinical Systems Specialist supporting MDMA-assisted therapy trials.Her work now focuses on what happens beyond the session: how clinics can better support clients as they move from insight into daily life. Drawing from clinical systems thinking, current psychedelic research, and real-world conversations in the field, she helps practitioners think more intentionally about continuity of care, client experience, and the structures that make integration more sustainable.She is currently authoring a chapter for the upcoming academic volume Psychedelics for Clinical Practice: Scientific, Social, Legal, and Economic Pathways, exploring psychedelic integration as a systems-level and implementation challenge in Western treatment-care models.

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