What Chronic Pain Teaches You About Doctors: ‘That's Why They Call It a Practice’

By Crystal Lindell

There’s an old story often shared in my family about my great uncle Jim. It’s a story I’ve heard since I was a kid, as a warning. 

You see, when Jim was 39 years old, he was told to take “heart medication.” 

But Jim felt fine, so he ignored the doctor’s orders and never took the pills. And then, one night, while his wife – my aunt Sylvia – was watching TV, Jim went upstairs, fell asleep and died. He never even made it to his 40th birthday. 

I never met Jim, but his early and unexpected death sent shock waves through generations of my family. And his story eventually morphed into family folklore, where the moral was that if a doctor gives you medication, you need to take it. 

It is with this mindset that I first approached my doctor appointments back in 2013 when I developed chronic pain in my right ribs. 

I didn’t know the cause – and to be honest, I still don’t really know for sure how it started – but I did know that I was in a lot of pain, and I was very scared. 

So when the doctors started loading me up with prescriptions, I filled every single one of them. Within a couple months, I had a line of pill bottles and patches on my nightstand spanning everything from gabapentin and amitriptyline to lidocaine and other medications I can’t even remember now. 

And I took all of them exactly as prescribed. 

The only problem was, the lessons of the past did not apply to my situation. The medications were prescribed by a team of doctors who were just throwing stuff at the wall to see if anything would stick. 

Taking them in combination caused horrible side effects. I was always on the verge of falling asleep, and I started gaining weight so fast that my clothes would stop fitting in the span of a week. 

Not to mention the fact that they also weren’t even doing the one thing I needed: None of them were helping my chronic pain. 

It wasn’t until I eventually went to the Mayo Clinic about a year later that I realized the flaws in my logic.

It was there that a doctor told me to just stop taking half the medications I was on. When I questioned her, she was shocked that I had not thought to stop any of them sooner. 

It sounds naive in retrospect, but that was the first time I started to realize that doctors were not gods. And that doctors are sometimes guessing when it comes to treatments.

It was a lot to process, because it also meant that I had to reckon with the fact that I could no longer just blindly follow whatever treatment they were giving me. Rather, I was going to have to figure out a lot of this for myself. 

There’s a common myth that if you ever get sick, a doctor will save you. But when you develop any sort of chronic health condition, you realize that doctors are just humans too. They come into appointments with prejudices, egos, bias, and flawed information. They also often disagree with other doctors.

This can be extremely difficult to navigate because when it comes to your health, a lot of treatments really are about life or death. And filtering out which ones are life and which ones might be death is dangerous business. Doctors are definitely needed to guide us, but they can’t be relied upon to do it alone. 

There’s an old saying about doctors: “There’s a reason they call it a practice.” Even doctors are still learning about the complexity of our bodies. Because as I said, they are not gods, and as such, they can’t be relied upon to be our saviors. 

In the end, we have to save ourselves. 

It’s not quite as comforting to see the world that way, with the knowledge that nobody is coming to save us. But it’s more realistic. And a lot more likely to actually save you. 

Ohio Governor Seeks Ban on All Kratom Products 

By Pat Anson

Ohio Governor Mike DeWine wants his state to immediately ban the sale and use of all natural and synthetic kratom products by designating them as illegal Schedule One controlled substances, on the same level as heroin and LSD. DeWine is also seeking bans on “all existing and future synthetic kratom compounds.” 

If approved by the Ohio Board of Pharmacy, stores and other businesses in the state would be required to remove all kratom edibles, powders and drinks from their shelves and stop selling them online.

Kratom comes from the leaves of a tree that grows in southeast Asia and has been used for centuries as a natural stimulant and pain reliever. In recent years, millions of Americans have discovered that kratom can be used to treat pain, anxiety, depression and addiction.

The FDA, however, has not approved kratom for any medical condition. The agency recently warned that synthetic kratom products boosted with concentrated forms of the kratom alkaloid 7-hydroxymitragynine (7-OH) could cause addiction and overdoses, and should be classified federally as Schedule One drugs by the DEA.

“These modified kratom products, sold online and in stores, are essentially legal, over-the-counter opiates that anyone – including kids – can buy with just a few bucks,” Gov. DeWine said in a press release.

“There is no accepted medical use for kratom in Ohio, and it is an imminent public health risk. The Ohio Board of Pharmacy should act with urgency to schedule all kratom compounds and future alterations of them as Schedule I illegal drugs.” 

This isn’t the first time the Ohio Board of Pharmacy will consider banning kratom. In 2018, the board voted to classify kratom as a Schedule One drug after receiving a report from the Ohio Substance Abuse Monitoring Network blaming kratom for several deaths and falsely claiming that people were injecting kratom like it was heroin. The board later rescinded its decision after a public outcry.

Another public outcry is likely, judging by the early reaction to DeWine’s proposal on X/Twitter.

“This is not good! Do you want to help patients with uncontrolled pain get their pain medicine doctors back? Because they quit prescribing,” said one poster. “Some have now found relief with Kratom and you want to take this away?”

“Prohibition of both plain-leaf kratom and 7-OH extracts is a bad thing. In both cases, they will lead to people turning to more dangerous opioids,” said another. “Kratom, particularly the pure leaf powder, is incredibly safe, pretty much impossible to have a lethal overdose. Mike DeWine is putting hundreds of thousands of people in his state at risk.”

“Our system has already turned their back on people suffering from chronic pain, disregarding their quality of life. Now the government wants to have us suffer more. This is total bull,” wrote another poster.

Under existing Ohio state law, kratom can only be sold in its natural, dried leaf or powdered form to people 18 years of age and older. Selling adulterated kratom is also illegal.

Despite those safeguards, the Ohio Department of Health says kratom was found to be a cause of death in more than 200 overdose deaths in the state from 2019 to 2024.

Earlier this month, Florida Attorney General James Uthmeier filed an emergency rule classifying concentrated forms of 7-OH as a Schedule One controlled substance in Florida. Gov. DeWine’s proposal would go much further than that, by classifying all kratom products – including natural leaf kratom – as Schedule One drugs.

Alabama, Arkansas, Indiana, Rhode Island, Vermont and Wisconsin have already classified kratom as a controlled substance. Dozens of cities, counties and local jurisdictions have also banned its sale.

While hundreds of deaths in the US have been linked to kratom use, most cases involve other drugs and illicit substances, making it difficult to determine the exact cause of death or any liability.

In a playbook reminiscent of the campaign against opioid pain medication, several law firms are seeking plaintiffs allegedly harmed by kratom to participate in class action lawsuits against kratom vendors and wholesalers.    

A former CDC director recently said that natural leaf kratom caused “no serious adverse events“ to patients involved in an FDA study, but agreed that synthetic kratom should be scheduled as an illegal drug.

“Natural kratom leaf, when used as it has been for centuries, presents a markedly different risk profile than the synthetic products flooding American markets,” said Robert Redfield, MD. “Full spectrum kratom, used responsibly, appears to have acceptable safety margins based on FDA’s own clinical data.”  

(Update 8/27/25: The Ohio Board of Pharmacy cancelled a special meeting scheduled for Wednesday to make an emergency move to ban kratom. No explanation was made as to why the meeting was cancelled.)

FDA Approves First Implant That Zaps Rheumatoid Arthritis

By Madora Pennington

A nerve stimulation implant recently approved by the FDA reduces symptoms of rheumatoid arthritis by stimulating the vagus nerve with mild electronic pulses. It’s the first FDA-approved neuromodulation device for adults with moderate-to-severe rheumatoid arthritis (RA).

The vagus nerve stimulator (VNS), created by SetPoint Medical of Valencia, California, is the size of a coffee bean. It is implanted in the left side of the neck under anesthesia during an outpatient procedure.

The device delivers electronic pulses into the vagus nerve for just one minute each day to calm the immune system and have an anti-inflammatory effect. RA causes the immune system to attack the lining of joints, damaging cartilage and eroding bone.

“The approval of the SetPoint System, the first-in-class neuroimmune modulation platform, represents a transformative milestone in the management of autoimmune diseases,” Murthy Simhambhatla, PhD, CEO of SetPoint Medical, said in a press release. “We plan to introduce the SetPoint System in targeted U.S. cities this year, followed by expansion across the country starting in early 2026.”

In auto-immune diseases like RA, the function of the vagus nerve becomes impaired. The nerve starts in the brainstem and runs through the neck, chest and abdomen, where it branches out into many organs.

The vagus nerve helps regulate the nervous system, including heart rate, blood pressure, respiration and digestion. When the nerve malfunctions, it causes inflammation and disrupts the immune system.

In a clinical trial of 242 patients, just over half (51.5%) had at least a 20% improvement in RA symptoms after 24 weeks with the SetPoint implant. Most patients tolerated the device well, but two experienced side effects of vocal cord weakness and hoarseness.

SETPOINT MEDICAL IMAGE

The SetPoint System is intended for RA patients who have not benefited from medications designed to calm the immune system, known as Disease-Modifying Antirheumatic Drugs (DMARDS) or the much stronger biologics that target specific immune cells. Doctors can monitor the device with an iPad application and patients can recharge it themselves with a wireless charger.

Vagus nerve stimulation is not new. In 1997, the FDA approved VNS for epilepsy. The implanted device is installed in the chest like a pacemaker to reduce seizures or even stop ones in progress.  

VNS can also treat chronic pain, by helping the brain "turn down" pain signals and reduce pain indirectly through its anti-inflammatory effects.  

Other types of pain for which VNS has demonstrated effectiveness are chronic migraine, chronic primary headache, cluster headache, fibromyalgia, chronic pancreatitis, esophageal pain, irritable bowel syndrome, neuropathic pain, musculoskeletal pain, osteoarthritis, and chronic low back pain.

SetPoint is investigating whether its technology can also treat multiple sclerosis, Crohn's disease and other autoimmune conditions.

Rising Health Insurance Costs Should Cause Americans More Alarm

By Elisabeth Rosenthal, KFF Health News

Wary of inflation, Americans have been watching the prices of everyday items such as eggs and gasoline. A less-noticed expense should cause greater alarm: rising premiums for health insurance. They have been trending upward for years and are now rising faster than ever.

Consider that, from 2000 to 2020, egg prices fluctuated between just under $1 and about $3 a dozen; they reached $6.23 in March but then fell to $3.78 in June. Average gas prices, after seesawing between $2 and $4 a gallon for more than a decade starting in 2005, peaked at $4.93 in 2022 and recently fell back to just over $3.

Meanwhile, since 1999, health insurance premiums for people with employer-provided coverage have more than quadrupled. From 2023 to 2024 alone, they rose more than 6% for both individuals and family coverage — a steeper increase than that of wages and overall inflation.

For many people who have the kind of insurance plans created by the Affordable Care Act (because they work for small companies or insure themselves), rates have probably risen even more drastically. In this market, state regulators scrutinize insurers’ proposed rate increases, but only if they exceed 15%.

And the situation is about to get worse: For 2026, ACA marketplace insurers have proposed eye-popping new prices: In New York, UnitedHealthcare has proposed a 66.4% rise. HMO Colorado has asked for an average increase of more than 33% in that state. In Washington, the average proposed increase across all insurers is 21.2%, and in Rhode Island it’s 23.7%.

According to Business Group on Health, a consortium of major employers, “actual health care costs have grown a cumulative 50% since 2017.” In a separate survey published in 2021, 87% of companies said that in the next five to 10 years, the cost of providing health insurance for their workers would become “unsustainable.”

And insurers in the ACA marketplace are increasing premiums by an average of 20% for next year, according to a new analysis. Imagine if tens of millions of Americans’ rent or mortgage payments were to suddenly increase by that amount.

Insurance regulators theoretically could demand that these proposed rates be lowered — and this often happens. But some states are more active than others in this regard. And all are wary that too much regulatory interference could drive insurers from their markets.

Insurers offer many explanations for their calculations, some of which are tied to recent actions by Congress and President Donald Trump. New tariffs on America’s trading partners, for example, are expected to push up the cost of drugs and medical supplies.

Meanwhile, reductions in health care spending included in the GOP budget bill, along with the expiration of some Biden-era premium subsidies at the end of this year, will cause many people to lose their health insurance. About 16 million Americans are expected to become uninsured by 2034, in many cases because keeping insurance will become unaffordable.

Because most of these people are likely to be young and/or healthy, the “risk pool” of those remaining insured will become older and sicker — and therefore more expensive to cover.

“Ultimately, we believe the ACA market will likely be smaller and higher acuity-driven next year,” Janey Kiryluik, vice president of corporate communications for Elevance Health (formerly known as Anthem), wrote in an email. She added: “Our position reflects early disciplined action.”

Remember, most insurers in the United States are public, for-profit companies; as such, they tend to act in the interests of their shareholders, not the patients whose health care they cover.

Large employers that manage their own health care plans might be able to negotiate better deals for their workers. But smaller companies, for the most part, will need to accept what’s on offer.

Premiums are not the only part of health insurance that’s getting more expensive. Deductibles — the money that beneficiaries must spend out-of-pocket before insurance kicks in — are also rising. The average deductible for a standard ACA silver plan in 2025 was nearly $5,000, about double what it was in 2014. (For those with employer-based insurance, the average number is just under $2,000.)

A few states are trying to stem the tide by offering a state-run “public option,” a basic affordable insurance plan that patients can choose. But they have struggled because a lower payment rate for workers generally means fewer participating providers and reduced access to care.

If voters paid as much attention to the price of health insurance as they do to the cost of gas and eggs, maybe elected officials would respond with more action.

KFF Health News is a national newsroom that produces in-depth journalism about health issues.

Back Pain Will Cost Australia Billions, but Rx Opioids Dismissed as a Remedy

By Crystal Lindell

A new study is sounding the alarm about lost worker productivity in Australia caused by chronic back pain, but an inexpensive remedy is being dismissed as “low-value or harmful.” 

Published in JAMA and led by researchers at Monash University, the study projects massive losses in productivity in Australia caused by long-term back pain. In 2024, nearly 3 million Australians had chronic back problems. That’s projected to grow to nearly 3.3 million by 2033.

The researchers estimate that back problems will result in an estimated loss of 3.4 million productivity-adjusted life-years over a 10-year period. That equates to a loss of more than $638 billion in Australian dollars in the country’s gross domestic product. That’s about $414 billion in US dollars.

That’s a lot of lost productivity and money. Just a 10% reduction in the number of workers with long-term back problems would save over $41 billion Australian dollars 

“Substantial economic gains could be achieved from reducing the prevalence and impact of the condition,” wrote lead author Sean Docking, PhD, a health economist at Monash University. “Action is needed to reduce the prevalence and burden of long-term back problems, with a focus on better-quality care and supporting people of working age to remain in the workforce and working productively.”

Indeed, there is a need to reduce the “impact of the condition.” I completely agree. However, while the authors call for interventions, they ignore an obvious tool that used to be widely available in Australia until 2018: codeine. 

That’s when Australia made codeine available by prescription only. Until then, the opioid was sold over-the-counter, and no doubt was often used to help people with back pain get out of bed, go to work, and be more productive.

While pop culture has often crafted a view that opioid medications are sleep inducing and that people who take them are lazy, the reality is that millions of people take them so that they can work and be productive. That’s especially true for mild, low-risk opioids like codeine.

The Monash researchers also point out that calling in sick and working less creates “considerable financial stress and may disproportionally impact already disadvantaged communities.”

Again, I agree. Not being able to work because of chronic pain can definitely result in a huge financial burden. And effectively treating that pain can literally make it possible for people to continue working and not rely on public assistance programs.

Unfortunately, rather than addressing this or offering practical solutions, the researchers dismiss all opioids as a “low-value” care option. Instead, they recommend “high-value” care, which basically consists of vague advice to “stay active” and get back to work as soon as possible. 

“A major way of addressing the burden of long-term back problems is to reduce the proportion of individuals who receive low-value or harmful care,” researchers said. “However, contrary to evidence-based guidelines, low-value care is prevalent. Examples of low-value care have been associated with longer absences from work. By contrast, high-value care could prevent chronicity, improve patient health outcomes, and result in productivity gains that benefit society.”

Perhaps the use of opioids is associated with “longer absences” because the pain medications are only given out when patients have severe back pain and really should stay at home.

It’s frustrating that, like many pain studies these days, the Monash researchers found a way to work in a negative view of opioids and suggest that they don’t “benefit society” or improve patient health.  

The fact that they left out how the crackdown on opioid prescribing contributes to lost productivity is also disheartening, especially when opioids are an inexpensive remedy.

When people have adequate pain relief, they can be productive. When they don’t, they can’t. Chronic pain patients understand this. Now we just need medical professionals to understand it too.

The Strange Denial of Complications Caused by Poorly Treated Pain

By Drs. Forest Tennant and Scott Guess

There has been no shortage of controversy, scandal and fraud regarding the opioid and pain crises of the past decade. One standout in the debate over opioids and pain treatment has been a lack of an honest, objective discussion of the benefits of pain care.

A basic tenet in medical practice and therapeutics is what is called the “risk-benefit” ratio. This is a simple analysis of whether a specific drug or therapeutic measure has more benefit than risk.

For example, the risk-benefit of drugs taken during pregnancy is well-known and established. But strangely, the debate over whether opioids have more benefit than risk in the treatment of pain has never been broached.

None of the parties involved, especially the anti-opioid zealots, will discuss any benefit that opioids may bring. In fact, essentially their only discussion is that opioids are a risk for overdose and addiction, so they have no benefit and shouldn’t be used.  

This risk is overrated and overstated in relation to opioids prescribed and monitored by a physician. According to the CDC, total opioid overdose deaths in the US (including deaths from illicit opioids) were 24 deaths per 100,000 population in 2023.

That compares to the overdose death rate for prescribed opioids, which was 4 per 100,000 population. That is a raw number for prescribed opioids.  Some data reports opioid deaths among physician monitored chronic pain patients to be as low at 0.1 per 100,000 population. 

In other words, the overdose risk of evidence with prescription opioid is minuscule.

Pain has a number of pathological complications that benefit from opioid therapy. In addition to physical relief, there are humanitarian benefits, such as a reduction in suffering, and the ability to mentally and physically function as a productive person.

When poorly treated or left untreated, chronic pain has profound negative and deleterious effects on the cardiovascular and endocrine (hormonal) systems. Pain puts the cardiovascular system into overdrive, which raises blood pressure and pulse rates. Coronary artery spasm may also result from severe chronic pain.

We can personally attest to prescribing blood pressure medication and nitroglycerin to many pain patients at risk of cardiac arrest or heart failure.

Hormonal suppression and deficiency of cortisol, testosterone, estradiol and other hormones are also common in undertreated chronic pain patients. Cortisol levels can drop below levels that sustain life. We have administered emergency cortisone to pain patients who were severely ill, debilitated, and near collapse because they had inadequate cortisol levels.

Among Dr. Thomas Addison’s eleven reported original cases of Addison’s Disease in 1855, about half had serious intractable pain conditions such as adhesive arachnoiditis.

Chronic pain has also been found to alter blood glucose and lipids (cholesterol). Sleep deprivation is another major problem in pain patients.  And anorexia with malnutrition is common.

Given the medical complications induced by pain, one would logically think that there would always be a discussion of risk-benefit when discussing opioid therapy. But we’ve never heard or seen such a discussion in medical literature or in political circles.

As if denial of benefits over risks weren’t bad enough, an even stranger denial has occurred. We have searched the major medical textbooks used in medical schools today, and couldn’t find a single word that chronic pain is a risk for hypertension and cardiac disease, much less hormonal deficiencies.

Isn’t it time we quit denying that chronic pain has medical complications that can be easily treated with opioids and other medicinals? The risks of opioid therapy simply don’t outweigh the benefits. 

Forest Tennant, MD, DrPH, is retired from clinical practice but continues his research on the treatment of intractable pain and arachnoiditis. Readers interested in learning more about his research should visit the Tennant Foundation’s website, Arachnoiditis Hope. You can subscribe to its research bulletins here.   

Scott Guess, PharmD, operates an independent pharmacy and clinic in Atascadero, CA that specializes in pain management and arachnoiditis.

The Tennant Foundation gives financial support to Pain News Network and sponsors PNN’s Patient Resources section.  

Most Pain Patients Stop Using Medical Cannabis Within a Year

By Crystal Lindell

A small new study found that most pain patients taking medical cannabis stopped using it within one year. 

The research – which was published in PLOS One  – looked at 76 patients diagnosed with chronic musculoskeletal pain, such as back, shoulder and knee pain. The patients were all certified for medical cannabis use at the Rothman Orthopaedic Institute in Pennsylvania between 2022 and 2024

By the first 3-month check-in, 44.7% (34 patients) had already stopped using medical cannabis, which researchers described as “a considerable early drop-off.” 

“This early discontinuation could point to initial expectations not being met, potential side effects, or insufficient symptom relief, which are common reasons for discontinuation in medical treatments,” wrote lead author Sina Ramtin, MD, who was a Research Fellow at the Rothman Institute. 

“Despite the growing acceptance of MC (medical cannabis) as a therapeutic option for chronic musculoskeletal pain, significant gaps remain in understanding its long-term efficacy. While some patients report significant pain relief, others experience dissatisfaction, intolerance, or prefer more definitive treatments, such as surgery or joint injections.” 

By one year, another 10 patients stopped using medical cannabis, which resulted in a total discontinuation rate of 57.9% (44 patients).  

Age was the biggest factor researchers found that separated those who continued using medical cannabis from those who didn’t. The patients who discontinued cannabis tended to be older (mean age of 71.5 years) than those who continued with cannabis therapy (64.5 years).

The researchers think age-related concerns about cognitive side effects, dizziness, or drug interactions may have played a role in decisions to stop using cannabis. Another possible explanation for the high discontinuation rate in elderly patients is that they are more likely to have more advanced pain conditions, such as degenerative disc disease and osteoarthritis, which are more difficult to treat.

The origin of pain, health insurance, and a patient’s race did not seem to have a significant impact on cannabis use, although a higher proportion of patients in the discontinued group reported low back pain. The research team attributed this to “the complexity of managing chronic pain conditions with medical cannabis alone.” 

Interestingly, the researchers did not find much difference in the health outcomes between those who continued using medical cannabis and those who didn’t. They looked at physical and mental health scores for patients, and found that there were no significant differences between the two groups.

“These findings suggest that while MC may offer benefits for some patients, further research is needed to better understand the long-term effects of MC on pain management and patient satisfaction, as well as the factors influencing treatment adherence,” the authors said. 

There has been a strong push over the last decade to reduce the use of prescription opioids, leaving patients little choice but to experiment with “alternative” pain treatments such as medical cannabis. Research like this reinforces the idea that cannabis is not always a perfect option for treating chronic pain.

“The relatively high early discontinuation rate indicates that MC may not provide immediate or sustained relief for all patients and highlights the need for better patient selection and management strategies in the early stages of treatment,” said Ramtin.

Also, while the study doesn’t delve into this, the cost of medical cannabis is often a huge barrier for pain patients. Medical cannabis can be much more expensive than the cash price of generic opioids, and is usually not covered by insurance.

Many of the patients in the study may have found more relief with opioids, but it’s unclear how many were given that option. 

At the end of the day, patients deserve a real choice when it comes to how they treat their pain. That means having access to different medications and therapies. Only then will people truly be able to find what works best for them.  

When Headlines Lie: Misleading News About Opioids and Chronic Pain

By Neen Monty

The headline in Physician’s Weekly screams alarm:

“Rising Use of Potent Opioids in Chronic Pain Management”

And then the sub heading:

“Long-term opioid use for chronic pain doubled, with potent opioids rising, underscoring the need for stronger guideline adoption”

Terrifying, right? We must do something!

But now, read the article. It’s based on a study recently published in the European Journal of Pain on the prevalence of long-term opioid therapy (LTOT) when treating patients with chronic non-cancer pain.

The Dutch study looked at opioid use over a ten-year period, from 2013 to 2022, using a large dataset drawn from primary care records in the Rotterdam region. This database covered more than half a million patients and included data from over 240 general practitioners.

The researchers focused on adults aged 18 and over who had been prescribed opioids continuously for at least three months. They tracked how common LTOT was over time, and also explored which diagnoses, co-existing conditions, and other medications were associated with it. They reported their findings using basic descriptive stats and calculated LTOT prevalence per 100 patient-years to show trends over the decade.

And what did they find?

“The prevalence of LTOT increased twofold from 0.54% (95% CI: 0.51–0.58) per 100 patient years in 2013 to 1.04% (95% CI: 1.00–1.07) in 2022. The proportion of LTOT episodes solely involving potent opioids slightly increased between 2013 and 2022”

In plain English, the prevalence of long-term opioid use by patients at the end of the study was just over 1%.

Yes, that’s right: 1%.

And the prevalence increased by just half a percentage point over a decade.

Hardly a crisis. Hardly anything to scream about.

But we can’t have that! We need a clickbait headline to demonize opioids and stop their prescribing! So, instead of reporting accurately on the very small increase in opioid prescribing, they focus on the “twofold” increase. Trying to manufacture a crisis where there is none.

It’s true, the prevalence of LTOT did double, from half a percent to one percent. And that’s what the headline highlighted, to try and make it sound like there is an opioid crisis in Europe. There is not.

This tactic is often used in presenting medical research – using relative percentages rather than the actual numbers. That is because relative percentages -- “Opioid Use Doubled!” -- sounds worse than “Opioid Use Increased by Half a Percent.”

It’s a trick that researchers and the media use all the time.

Why do this? It’s dishonest. It’s deceptive. And it destroys our trust in science. They are trying to manufacture a crisis when there is none.

Why not research and report an actual crisis? Instead of making one up?

The Physician’s Weekly headline exemplifies the worst of scientific spin: inflating tiny fractional changes and omitting context. It potentially harms patients by reinforcing the myth that opioids don’t work long term and should be withheld. That myth persists because of misleading reporting like this.

Finally! An Honest Headline

It was nice to see some accurate reporting in Scimex, an Australian online news portal that tries to help journalists cover science. Instead of the usual deceptive, sensationalist headlines, this one tells the truth:

“Pain Reprocessing Therapy (PRT) could help those with mild chronic back pain”

This was so refreshing to see! Because it’s so very, very rare.

Most reporting on PRT glosses over a critical point: It has only been studied in people with mild, non-specific back pain. An average of 4 on the zero-to-10 pain scale.

That nuance is often lost in the hype about alternative treatments like PRT, cognitive behavioral therapy, mindfulness and TENS.

You do not treat 8/10 back pain the same way you treat 4/10 back pain.

What happens when people are misled about PRT? It gets recommended to people with severe, pathological pain — often with clearly identifiable causes — and everyone acts surprised when it doesn’t work.

Let’s be clear:

  • PRT is not for severe back pain

  • PRT is not for pain caused by pathology

  • PRT is not a cure-all

But you wouldn’t know that from most headlines about PRT, such as “New therapy aims to cure back pain without drugs, surgery” and “A New Way to Treat Back Pain.”

Then you read the small print: All the participants in PRT studies had non-specific back pain from an unknown cause. And they had mild pain.

The researchers are often complicit, cherry-picking and hyping their own data. Why? Because they need funding. Because they’re writing a book. Because professors have to "publish or perish" to keep their jobs. Because it’s easier to mislead the public than to admit a therapy has limits. And you don’t get to be a guru if your therapy only works for a minority of patients with mild pain.

This kind of spin harms people with severe chronic secondary pain. It feeds the narrative that if you're still in pain, then it’s your fault. You didn’t try hard enough. You’re catastrophizing. You need to retrain your brain.

It feeds the stigma that all chronic pain is mild and easily curable. And that anyone who says their pain is severe has psychological problems.

No. Maybe their pain is caused by pathology, like tissue damage or herniated discs. Maybe their pain is nociceptive or neuropathic.

This is why chronic pain patients must be included on every research team. Someone with real-world, high-impact chronic pain would never let this kind of misrepresentation slide. And the rest of the team wouldn’t be able to claim ignorance.

We need more honesty and integrity in research and the media. We need headlines that reflect the actual findings. We need conclusions that match the data, not some predetermined narrative. Right now, most media coverage doesn’t even try.

Read the study, then read the headline. They rarely match. That’s how we ended up with a generation of healthcare providers who think opioids are bad, all chronic pain is primary pain, and that PRT is some miracle therapy.

It’s not. PRT may be helpful to people who are depressed or have anxiety, but should not be a first-line treatment for everyone. It’s only been tested in people with mild back pain for which there is no known physical cause. It has not been shown to work for people with severe pain or structural pathology.

But the researchers usually gloss over that. And the headlines and conclusions rarely reflect those facts or spell out who PRT is for and who it is not for.

Because here’s the truth: Pain Reprocessing Therapy is not a treatment for chronic pain. It’s a treatment for anxiety and depression.

That’s the real headline.

Neen Monty is a patient advocate in Australia who lives with rheumatoid arthritis and Chronic Inflammatory Demyelinating Polyneuropathy (CIDP), a progressive neurological disease that attacks the nerves.

Neen is dedicated to challenging misinformation and promoting access to safe, effective pain relief. She has created a website for Pain Patient Advocacy Australia to show that prescription opioids can be safe and effective, even when taken long term. You can subscribe to Neen’s free newsletter on Substack, “Arthritic Chick on Chronic Pain.”

‘A Lot of Uncertainty’ if Ketamine Works for Chronic Pain

By Pat Anson

Hundreds of ketamine clinics have opened across the United States in recent years, offering infusions of the anesthetic for a variety of medical conditions – from anxiety and depression to PTSD and chronic pain. Ketamine is only FDA-approved for depression and anesthesia, so its use in treating pain is considered “off-label.”

That off-label use is not supported by scientific evidence, a new Cochrane review has found. Australian researchers analyzed 67 clinical trials involving over 2,300 adults who used ketamine or four similar drugs that block brain receptors and found little evidence that they work as pain relievers.

“We want to be clear – we're not saying ketamine is ineffective, but there’s a lot of uncertainty,” said lead author Michael Ferraro, a doctoral candidate at the University of New South Wales (UNSW). “The data could point to a benefit or no effect at all. Right now, we just don’t know.”

Ferraro and his colleagues looked at the therapeutic effects of ketamine, memantine, dextromethorphan, amantadine and magnesium on various chronic pain conditions and found no evidence that they benefit any condition at any dose. Side effects such as delusion, delirium and paranoia were a major concern, particularly with intravenous use.

"This group of drugs, and ketamine in particular, are in relatively common use for chronic pain around the world. Yet we have no convincing evidence that they are delivering meaningful benefits for people with pain, even in the short term,” said co-author Neil O'Connell, a Professor of Evidence-Based Healthcare at Brunel University of London.

“That seems a good reason to be cautious in the clinic and clearly indicates an urgent need to undertake high quality trials.”

The reviewers also found no studies that support two supposed benefits of ketamine: that it reduces depression and the use of opioids. Ketamine is often used as a treatment for depression or as an alternative to opioids for pain relief.

“We've seen the harm that can come from taking medicines developed for acute pain and applying them to chronic pain, opioids are a prime example. Now we're seeing a similar pattern with ketamine,” said co-author James McAuley, PhD, a Psychology Professor at UNSW and senior researcher at Neuroscience Research Australia.

“As opioid prescribing is slowly reduced, there’s a growing demand for alternatives, but we need to be careful not to rush into widespread use without strong evidence.”

A ‘Lifeline’ for Pain Patients

But patients who have received ketamine infusions found them useful in relieving pain from Complex Regional Pain Syndrome (CRPS) and other difficult-to-treat conditions.

“I implore the medical community not to dismiss ketamine as a treatment option based solely on this one review, when tens of thousands of us are finding relief,” says Barby Ingle, founder and past president of the International Pain Foundation. “For many of us, ketamine is not just an option — it’s a lifeline.

“Chronic pain is a complex, individualized condition, and ruling out therapies that benefit even a subset of patients perpetuates a one-size-fits-all approach that has long plagued healthcare. Such dismissals increase costs to society by limiting access to effective treatments, leaving patients to suffer unnecessarily. I have lost too many friends to suicide with these painful rare diseases.”

In 2009, Ingle had her CRPS, also known as Reflex Sympathetic Dystrophy (RSD) or algoneurodystrphy, treated for the first time with ketamine by the late Dr. Robert Schwartzman, a neurologist who pioneered the use of ketamine infusions as a chronic pain treatment. She went into the hospital in a wheelchair, but was able to walk out a week later after a series of ketamine infusions by Schwartzman. She continues to get infusions regularly.

“My experience with IV-ketamine has allowed me to manage my pain without the fear of addiction or life-threatening side effects, further emphasizing its value as a treatment option long-term,” Ingle told PNN.  

“Ketamine can offer significant advantages over opioids, as it is non-addictive and does not suppress breathing, making it a safer option for long-term pain management. These benefits are particularly crucial for patients with chronic pain, who often face the risks of opioid dependence and respiratory complications. For other patients due to their genetics, lifestyle, and environment, opioids may be the best option. I am saying don’t take any option off the table.”

Ingle says rigorous, high-quality clinical studies are needed to document the benefits of ketamine therapy. Of the 67 studies that were reviewed by researchers, many were small or short-term, which limited their ability to draw conclusions.

Some U.S. medical organizations support the use of ketamine under certain circumstances. The American Society of Anesthesiologists, American Society of Regional Anesthesia and Pain Medicine, and the American Academy of Pain Medicine have guidelines that support ketamine infusions for CRPS, chronic neuropathic pain and short-term acute pain.

FDA Approves First New Fibromyalgia Drug in 15 Years

By Pat Anson

Fibromyalgia sufferers who have yearned for new treatments finally have one. Tonix Pharmaceuticals says the Food and Drug Administration has approved Tonmya for the treatment of fibromyalgia in adults -- the first new FDA-approved therapy for fibromyalgia in over 15 years.

Fibromyalgia is a poorly understand chronic pain condition that affects about 10 million Americans, most of them women. It causes an array of symptoms, such as widespread body aches, fatigue, insomnia, mood disorders and brain fog.

Until now, the FDA has approved only three medications for fibromyalgia: duloxetine (Cymbalta), pregabalin (Lyrica), and milnacipran (Savella). Many patients consider the drugs ineffective or have too many side effects.

“The FDA approval of Tonmya as a first-line treatment for fibromyalgia represents a landmark advancement for the millions of people in the U.S. suffering from the debilitating pain this condition causes,” Seth Lederman, MD, CEO of Tonix, said in a press release. “At Tonix, we recognized the transformative potential of pursuing a new approach with Tonmya for fibromyalgia, a chronic overlapping pain condition, that has gone without innovation for many years.”

Tonmya is more of a sleep aid than an analgesic. The tablet is a new, faster-acting formulation of an old drug: cyclobenzaprine hydrochloride (Flexeril), a muscle relaxant that was originally developed as an antidepressant. Tonmya is meant to be taken before bedtime sublingually, to be dissolved under the tongue for rapid absorption into the bloodstream.

Tonix believes that improving sleep quality, specifically restorative sleep, is the key to reducing fibromyalgia symptoms. Poor sleep not only worsens pain, but causes anxiety and depression, which are common features of fibromyalgia. Pain, insomnia, and mood disorders become a vicious cycle when fibromyalgia is poorly treated.

In a Phase 3 clinical study, fibromyalgia patients taking Tonmya reported better sleep and less fatigue after three months, which coincided with at least a 30% reduction in pain in about half of patients. Tonmya was generally well tolerated, with fewer side effects than the other three fibromyalgia medications.

It’s notable that all of the FDA-approved drugs for fibromyalgia are neither new or novel. They were originally developed for other purposes — to relieve depression or seizures — and are simply being repurposed as fibromyalgia treatments.

“The chronic pain of fibromyalgia is debilitating to every aspect of a person’s life, including causing sleep disturbance and fatigue, all of which can negatively impact someone’s ability to carry out their daily activities,” said Sharon Waldrop, founder of the Fibromyalgia Association. “For over 15 years, this community has been underserved and waiting for new treatment options. This approval is a promising step forward and brings renewed hope to millions.”

Tonmya is expected to become available in the fourth quarter of 2025.

Moral Panic Over Herbal Drink Stirs Anti-Kratom Hysteria

By Crystal Lindell 

Last month, a TikTok influencer who goes by the name “YourBestieMisha” posted a video claiming that he was harassed at a Texas gas station by a teenager craving for a drink called “Feel Free.” 

The drink, which is sold in little blue bottles, is made by Oklahoma-based Botanic Tonics. It’s infused with kava root, natural leaf kratom, and other herbs. 

In the video, Michael “Misha” Brown alleges that as he was going into the gas station, he was approached by a "child" who seemed to be about 14 years old.

In Texas, you have to be at least 18 to buy kratom, so when the teen asked Brown to help him get Feel Free, Brown said no. That’s when the teen lunged for his wallet, which Brown says he was able to pull away from the boy. 

Brown then went into the gas station and shared what happened with the clerk, who told him Feel Free is so addictive that people are coming in five or six times a day to purchase a bottle.

“So I get home and look into this and people are literally going to rehab over this drink that is legal in most states in the U.S. and is sold in gas stations,” Brown says in the video. “I don't think we talk enough about things that are legal but are sold next to gum and energy drinks.”

The video has amassed more than 23 million views. However, there does not appear to be any follow-up videos posted by Brown elaborating on his story, or providing any evidence that any of it actually happened. 

MICHAEL “MISHA” BROWN (TIKTOK VIDEO)

In fact, the video has all the classic hallmarks of a “moral panic” story, which is an exaggerated fear or anxiety about something that is fueled by media attention or a video going “viral” online. In this case, there’s the implied harm to a child, no way to verify any of it, and an incentive for the creator to embellish and exaggerate his claims. 

Brown, who is an aspiring actor and singer, has posted thousands of videos online and has over three million followers on TikTok. He also has a podcast and is working on a book. Like other social media influencers, Brown’s income comes from advertising revenue, which is based on the number of views his videos get.

Even if his gas station story actually happened, there’s still a lot to unpack. 

Aside from the fact that children can already purchase excessive amounts of caffeine all on their own, both cigarettes and alcohol are also “things that are legal,” and are sold right next to gum and energy drinks in gas stations across the country. 

The makers of Feel Free have already self-imposed an age restriction for customers to be 21 and older. So if the teen in Brown’s story was hooked on Feel Free, then an adult was helping him get it long before the run-in at the gas station. 

And yes, that is a problem, just like it would be a problem if an adult was buying vodka for a 14-year-old. However, most will agree that doesn’t mean vodka should be illegal for adults.

Videos like Brown’s are concerning because they have the potential to spark real policy debates and hysteria from people who know nothing about kratom, a dietary supplement used by millions for pain relief or as an energy booster. 

The safety of kratom became a hot topic again when the FDA recently announced plans to make the kratom alkaloid 7-hydroxymitragynine (7-OH) an illegal Schedule One controlled substance. 7-OH occurs naturally in kratom in trace amounts, but some kratom vendors sell a concentrated, synthetic version of 7-OH to boost its potency.

Although Feel Free contains very little 7-OH, many media stories have conflated the two, implying the drink has “opioid-like effects” and is “hooking young people.”

In 2023, a class action lawsuit was filed against Botanic Tonics, alleging that Feel Free was misleadingly advertised as a healthy alternative to alcohol. The company settled the case for $8.75 million and agreed to put stronger safety warnings on its products.

Botanic Tonics responded to this latest uproar by trying to differentiate Feel Free from 7-OH, and “applauding” the FDA for its move. 

"Our products contain trace amounts of 7-OH that occur naturally during the traditional drying process — levels that are dramatically different from the concentrated synthetic products now under FDA scrutiny," said Cameron Korehbandi, CEO of Botanic Tonics. "The difference between natural leaf kratom and synthetic 7-OH concentrates represents a night and day distinction in terms of safety and consumer protection."

In my opinion, this was a huge mistake for Botanic Tonics. While it’s tempting to think it can keep Feel Free legal by appeasing the FDA, it’s already become clear that the moral panic around 7-OH is spreading to all kratom products

As such, Botanic Tonics should unite with kratom users to ensure that 7-OH continues to be sold the same way nicotine, alcohol, caffeine, and kratom leaf already are: over the counter and with age restrictions. 

If the FDA succeeds in making 7-OH a Schedule One controlled substance, it won’t be long until they come after kratom leaf as well.

From Arthritis to Pain Relief: 5 Benefits of Ginger

By Dipa Kamdar

From warming winter teas to zesty stir-fries, ginger (Zingiber officinale) has long been a kitchen staple. But beyond its culinary charm, this spicy root has a rich history in traditional medicine – and modern science is catching up. Studies now show that ginger may offer a wide range of health benefits, from easing nausea and relieving colds to reducing inflammation and supporting heart health.

Here’s what you need to know:

1. Nausea Relief

Multiple clinical trials have shown consistent evidence that ginger can reduce nausea and vomiting, particularly when compared to a placebo. The NHS even recommends ginger-containing foods or teas for easing nausea.

Ginger seems especially effective for nausea during pregnancy. In small doses, it’s considered a safe and effective option for people who don’t respond well to standard anti-nausea treatments.

There’s also promising evidence that ginger can help with chemotherapy-induced nausea, though results are mixed when it comes to motion sickness and post-surgery nausea.

Researchers believe ginger’s anti-nausea effects may work by blocking serotonin receptors and acting on both the gut and brain. It may also help by reducing gas and bloating in the digestive tract.

2. Anti-Inflammatory Benefits

Ginger is rich in bioactive compounds, such as gingerol and shogaol, which have strong antioxidant and anti-inflammatory properties.

Recent research suggests ginger supplements may help regulate inflammation, especially in autoimmune conditions. One study found that ginger reduced the activity of neutrophils — white blood cells that often become overactive in diseases like lupus, rheumatoid arthritis and antiphospholipid syndrome.

Neutrophils produce extracellular traps (NETs), which are web-like structures used to trap and kill pathogens. But when NETs form excessively, they can fuel autoimmune diseases. In the study, taking ginger daily for one week significantly reduced NET formation.

While this study used ginger supplements, it’s unclear whether fresh ginger or tea has the same effect. Still, the findings suggest ginger may be a helpful, natural option for people with certain autoimmune conditions – though more research is needed.

Ginger also has antimicrobial properties, meaning it can help combat bacteria, viruses and other harmful microbes. Combined with its anti-inflammatory effects, this makes ginger a popular remedy for easing cold and flu symptoms like sore throats.

3. Pain Management

When it comes to pain, the research on ginger is encouraging – though not conclusive. Some studies show that ginger extract can reduce knee pain and stiffness in people with osteoarthritis, especially during the early stages of treatment. However, results vary, and not everyone experiences the same level of relief.

For muscle pain, one study found that taking two grams of ginger daily for 11 days reduced soreness after exercise.

Ginger may also ease menstrual pain. In fact, some studies suggest its effectiveness rivals that of non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drugs like ibuprofen.

Researchers believe ginger works by activating pathways in the nervous system that dampen pain signals. It may also inhibit inflammatory chemicals like prostaglandins and leukotrienes.

4. Heart Health and Diabetes Support

High blood pressure, high blood sugar and elevated “bad” cholesterol (low-density lipoprotein or LDL cholesterol) are all risk factors for heart disease. Ginger may help with all three.

A 2022 review of 26 clinical trials found that ginger supplementation can significantly improve cholesterol levels — lowering triglycerides, total cholesterol and LDL cholesterol, while raising HDL (“good”) cholesterol. It may also lower blood pressure.

For people with type 2 diabetes, ginger could offer additional benefits. A review of ten studies found that taking one to three grams of ginger daily for four to 12 weeks helped improve both cholesterol levels and blood sugar control.

These benefits appear to come from multiple mechanisms, including improved insulin sensitivity, enhanced glucose uptake in cells, and reduced oxidative stress. Ginger’s anti-inflammatory actions may also contribute to its heart-protective effects.

Some early research suggests that ginger may also offer benefits for sexual health, though evidence in humans is still limited. Animal studies have found that ginger can boost testosterone levels, improve blood flow, and enhance sexual behaviour. In traditional medicine systems, it has long been used as an aphrodisiac. While there’s not yet strong clinical evidence to confirm a direct impact on libido, ginger’s anti-inflammatory, circulatory and hormonal effects could play a supportive role, particularly for people managing conditions like diabetes or oxidative stress.

5. Brain Health

Emerging evidence suggests ginger may also offer neuroprotective and anti-cancer benefits. Lab-based studies show that ginger compounds can help protect brain cells from oxidative damage – a key factor in neurodegenerative diseases like Alzheimer’s.

Other in-vitro research has found that ginger can slow the growth of some cancer cells. However, these findings are still in early stages and more research is needed to confirm their relevance in humans.

Ginger is generally safe when consumed in food or tea. But like any supplement, it should be used in moderation.

Doses above four grams a day may cause side effects such as heartburn, bloating, diarrhoea or mouth irritation. These are usually mild and temporary.

Certain groups should use caution with high doses. Ginger may increase bleeding risk in people on blood thinners (like warfarin, aspirin or clopidogrel), and it can enhance the effects of diabetes or blood pressure medications, potentially leading to low blood sugar or blood pressure. Pregnant women should also consult a doctor before using high doses.

So ginger isn’t just a fragrant kitchen spice – it’s a natural remedy with growing scientific support. For most people, enjoying ginger in food or tea is a safe and effective way to tap into its therapeutic potential. If you’re considering taking supplements, it’s always best to speak with your doctor or pharmacist first, especially if you’re managing a medical condition or taking medication.

Dipa Kamdar is a Senior Lecturer in Pharmacy Practice at Kingston University in London.  She is registered pharmacist and a member of the Royal Pharmaceutical Society.

This article originally appeared in The Conversation and is republished with permission.

Does Having a Diagnosis Change How You Are Treated?

By Crystal Lindell

A few months after I got my first official diagnosis of Ehlers-Danlos syndrome in 2018, I had an appointment with a new orthopedic doctor. 

I was having really bad pain in my left shoulder that I injured while on crutches, which I was using as a result of a foot injury. It felt like I couldn’t catch a break. 

There was a new EDS diagnosis on my patient intake form, which I assumed would be relevant in one way or another. I turned in the form and was led back to a patient room to go over all my symptoms with the nurse, before being left to anxiously wait in an overly air conditioned exam room to meet the doctor. 

When he finally walked in, he didn’t bother to say hello. In fact, before he even introduced himself, he looked up from my patient intake form, scanned me up and down, and said in an accusatory tone, “So. What makes you think you have Ehlers-Danlos syndrome?”

The question caught me off guard. I didn’t “think” I had EDS. I had literally been diagnosed by another doctor in the same hospital system a few months prior.

“Um, well, I was diagnosed by a doctor who works here, and my mom has it, my brother has it, my uncle has it, and my cousin has it.”

“Oh,” he replied, before hastily trying to move on. But the tone had already been set. Instead of it being a meeting between patient and caregiver, it had shifted to a meeting between patient and accuser.

For many years, I had assumed that having an official medical diagnosis would change how doctors treated me. I spent five years blindly struggling with a chronic pain that had no name, desperately searching for a diagnosis or cause. 

If only I had the validation of some sort of official medical diagnosis, then finally they would have to take me seriously. Or so I thought. 

But here I was, getting a crash course in why that wasn’t going to be the case. 

It turns out that doctors who try to dismiss you pre-diagnosis will also try to dismiss you post-diagnosis. 

I also assumed that if I had a “real” diagnosis, my family, friends and professional contacts would be more willing to accept the pain that had been plaguing me for years. 

But alas, that was not the case either. Explaining to them that I had Ehlers-Danlos syndrome resulted in zero changes in their behavior either. 

What I did find is that people who empathized with my chronic pain pre-diagnosis also empathized with my pain post-diagnosis. 

It turns out, it was never about the diagnosis.The people who sneered, judged and dismissed me before I knew I had EDS, continued to sneer, judge and dismiss me after I knew I had EDS too. 

Where before they would try to blame their behavior on my lack of a diagnosis, they just found new reasons after I did have one. Their justifications turned to things like blaming my weight, calling me lazy, and lamenting that if I really wanted to get better, I would try more treatments and take fewer opioids. 

I understand the personal toll it can take to deal with health issues without a diagnosis. And knowing that I have EDS helped me find online support groups and helped me better navigate my medical care. So I do fully support continuing the search for answers if you’re undiagnosed. 

But as a patient who spent years in pain, both with and without a diagnosis, I’m unfortunately here to report that finally getting one probably won’t change how most doctors and loved ones treat you. 

Because how they treat you has never been based on you – it was always just a reflection of themselves.

FDA’s 7-OH Warning Sparks Sensational Claims About Kratom

By Pat Anson

The FDA’s latest campaign against kratom has reignited a wave of sensational claims in the media about the herbal supplement and its potential for addiction.

“A new emergency is quietly growing in the United States,” warns La Voce di New York, with an ominous but corny headline that calls kratom a new “Hippie Drug” disguised as an alternative to coffee.

“However, the preparation hides a high potential for addiction, with symptoms and withdrawal crises very similar to those caused by the most dangerous opioids.”

USA Today said it spoke with over 20 people who became “severely addicted” to kratom. One of them was Kim Maloney, a 49-year-old Ohio mother, who lost her car, home and marriage when her kratom use spun out of control. She believes it would have killed her, had she not gone into rehab.

"My eyes were rolling in the back of my head. I couldn't walk straight. I didn't leave my couch for months. I had pancreatitis. I had shingles. I was sick. I mean, I was really sick,” Maloney said.

Other news outlets are calling kratom “gas station heroin” and “legal morphine,” taking their cue from FDA Commissioner Marty Makary, MD, who recently announced plans to have a kratom alkaloid called 7-hydroxymitragynine (7-OH) classified as a Schedule One controlled substance --- the same category as heroin and LSD.

“7-OH is an opioid that can be more potent than morphine. We need regulation and public education to prevent another wave of the opioid epidemic,” said Makary.

‘Replacing One Addiction with Another’

The FDA’s renewed interest in kratom — and 7-OH in particular — apparently stems from a growing number of social media posts about it being addictive. A Reddit page created last year for people trying to quit 7-OH has over 4,000 members.

“You will have a passionate love affair with 7OH before it shows its true colors,” warns one former user. “Like many, I was a recovered kratom user before trying 7OH. And for the better part of a year, it felt like 7OH was a miracle drug that fixed all the negative side-effects of plain leaf kratom. IT'S NOT.”

Nicholas Campana, a recovering addict and YouTube influencer who goes by the name "Goblin," posted a video a few months ago calling 7-OH the “most dangerous drug in the smoke shop.”

“While kratom is a legitimate step down from opiates, in my opinion this is replacing one addiction with another,” Campana said in the video, which has been viewed over 700,000 times. "7-OH is the latest smoke shop craze. It’s not like the other ones, because this a very, very addictive opioid.”

For the record, neither kratom or 7-OH are opioids. They do not come from poppies. Kratom leaves come from Mitragyna speciosa, a tropical tree native to southeast Asia that belongs to the same botanical family as coffee.

Kratom does have opioid-like effects, however, and 7-OH is one of its active ingredients. In its natural state, only trace amounts of 7-OH are present in kratom. But some kratom vendors are selling gummies, drinks and tablets with concentrated synthetic versions of 7-OH to boost their potency.

‘Works as Well as Oxycodone’

According to one study, as many as two million Americans use kratom. Most take it for pain relief or as an energy booster, and have only been exposed to unadulterated kratom leaf products. Some chronic pain sufferers have tried 7-OH and found it just as effective as prescription opioids.

One of them is Emil, who suffers from chronic pancreatitis. Like many other pain patients, Emil has faced frustrating delays getting his opioid prescriptions filled. He asked that we not use his last name.

“I have had good experiences with 7-OH, using it primarily when I am waiting for a new prescription from my doctor since that can take over a week from the time I request it to getting it filled by the pharmacy, sometimes even longer,” Emil told PNN. ““It does not seem to cause the tiredness and aloofness, for lack of a better word, that prescription painkillers can cause and I feel like I am able to focus better, with less of the unpleasant side effects of painkillers such as nausea, dry mouth, etc. 

“I am prescribed oxycodone for pain and while it is somewhat effective in combination with ibuprofen in treating my pain, it is a constant struggle to keep my pain under control.  I would say that 7-OH works just about as well as oxycodone in controlling the pain, but definitely with less unpleasant side effects and really no so-called withdrawal symptoms or cravings, at least for me, as some people report with prescription painkillers. I truly do not understand why they are trying to ban it outright as a Schedule I substance with no medical use.”

The FDA has offered surprisingly little evidence about the harmful effects of 7-OH or why it is again trying to classify it as a Schedule One controlled substance. The FDA’s Adverse Event Reporting System has recorded only 15 cases involving 7-OH, two of them deaths, but because of “ambiguity about the contributory role of 7-OH” — which suggests other drugs were involved — the agency is downplaying the significance of those cases.

“This raises serious questions about the evidentiary basis for such a significant regulatory action,” Jeff Smith, PhD, national policy director for the Holistic Alternative Recovery Trust, wrote in an op/ed published in Medical Economics. “More research is needed to fully assess 7-OH’s risks, including its potential for misuse, dependence or drug-drug interactions. But they do not support the claim that 7-OH is an imminent threat to public health.

“To be clear, 7-OH is a potent compound. But potency alone does not justify prohibition. Alcohol, benzodiazepines and prescription opioids are far more dangerous and remain legally available under strict regulation. The proper response to uncertainty is research and oversight: not bans.”

‘Embarassing FDA Mistakes’

Kratom supporters and those who want access to 7-OH can take comfort in the FDA’s failure to get kratom banned in previous attempts.

In 2016, the Drug Enforcement Administration – acting at the request of the FDA – tried to classify 7-OH and the kratom alkaloid mitragynine as Schedule One drugs, only to drop those efforts after a public outcry. A top federal health official later said the FDA withdrew its scheduling request because of “embarrassingly poor evidence & data.”

In 2024, the FDA made another preliminary attempt at regulating kratom, publishing a notice in the Federal Register seeking public comment on a proposed survey of kratom users to evaluate 7-OH and mitragynine for potential harms. Ten days later, the FDA abruptly withdrew its study plans, citing unexplained “circumstances necessitating changes.”

Kratom advocates at the time said the FDA’s withdrawal of the study notice was the “latest embarrassing mistake” the agency made about kratom.

“The FDA’s few anti-kratom staff are repeatedly undermining the Agency’s credibility on harm reduction strategies,” said Mac Haddow, Senior Fellow on Public Policy at the American Kratom Association (AKA), an association of kratom vendors. “The FDA remains trapped in the web of their own making that unfairly demonizes products like kratom.”

The AKA has since changed its tune, and is now applauding the FDA for its “decisive and science-driven recommendation to classify 7-hydroxymitragynine (7-OH) as a Schedule I substance.”

“These 7-OH products are not kratom. They are chemically altered substances that carry potent opioid-like effects and pose an imminent threat to consumers,” Haddow said in a new statement.

It’s up to the DEA to decide if 7-OH should be classified as a controlled substance. If it does, the DEA must then publish a notice in the Federal Register, take public comments and reevaluate the evidence, a rulemaking process that could take months or even years. Until then, 7-OH can legally remain on the market under federal law as an unregulated dietary supplement, as long as no medical claims are made about it.

(Update 8/13/25: Florida isn’t waiting for the DEA or FDA to act. Florida Attorney General James Uthmeier has filed an emergency rule classifying concentrated forms of 7-OH as a Schedule One controlled substance in Florida. The rule makes it illegal to sell, possess or distribute concentrated forms of 7-OH in the state, calling them “an immediate and imminent hazard to the public health, safety, and welfare.”)

Hydromorphone Injections Can Quickly Relieve Intractable Pain

By Dr. Forest Tennant

I recall the time over a decade ago when Anazao Laboratory in Tampa, Florida informed me they had developed ultra-high potency (50 mg/ml) hydromorphone for palliative pain care. Anazao Labs was well aware of my patients’ needs, since they formulated my endocrine medicinals. 

In contrast to the other injectable opioids, Anazao’s hydromorphone formulation could be injected subcutaneously under the skin rather than intramuscularly.  The injection required a very small amount of fluid (.1 to .2 ml) that was administered with an allergy or insulin syringe.

My patients’ pain was called “intractable” to meet California’s Medical Board guideline and legal definitions.  The criteria for patients to enter my clinic was a determination that there was a high risk of death within one year unless opioid treatment could be administered. The top causes of intractable pain were adhesive arachnoiditis, traumatic brain injury, severe neuropathies (CRPS), autoimmune disease, and post-cancer care.

I recall the first patient to whom I prescribed ultra-high potency hydromorphone.  She was not receiving adequate pain relief with long-acting and breakthrough opioids, so she was referred for an intrathecal implanted device (pain pump) for opioid administration.  Due primarily to its cost and insurance reasons, she could not obtain this expensive treatment, so I chose to experiment with the new ultra-high potency hydromorphone. 

It worked remarkably well.  In fact, she soon found she didn’t require a long-acting or breakthrough opioid. Using the new hydromorphone formulation, she dropped her daily morphine milligram equivalent (MME) dosage from over 500 to less than 100 MME per day.

After success with this patient, I prescribed the hydromorphone formulation to other patients on high dose oral opioids, who could not obtain intrathecal opioids or an implanted electrical stimulator.  All the patients tolerated and adjusted well to it.  Ultra-high dose hydromorphone became an alternative to intrathecal opioids at my pain clinic.

When I later prescribed the hydromorphone formulation to other patients with intractable pain, I found that I could eliminate or reduce their use of high dose opioids through oral, patch or sublingual administration, and obtain equal or superior pain relief.

I have since retired from clinical practice, but still believe this is a major reason for using ultra-high potency hydromorphone for patients in severe pain.  My initial experience told me that the hydromorphone formulation could be an alternative to standard intractable pain care, which is the combined use of a long-acting opioid with a short-acting opioid for breakthrough pain. That therapy has shortcomings, because long-acting opioids suppress endocrine levels, which can lead to a wide range of health problems.

My procedure in prescribing hydromorphone was to instruct both the patient and a live-in family member on proper injection technique, secure storage, and maintaining sterility.  At the time I closed my clinic, I probably had about 2 dozen patients who successfully used this innovative formulation.

I have come to some conclusions that go against common beliefs about opioid therapy.  First and foremost, high potency hydromorphone can usually substitute in most cases for long-acting opioids such as OxyContin, transdermal fentanyl, and methadone.  Effective pain relief occurs within minutes after the injection, so the patient doesn’t have a proclivity to follow the opioid dose with a sedative or neuropathic drug such as a benzodiazepine. 

Seldom did my patients use over 3 to 4 injections a day.  To date, I know of no overdoses occurring.  I attribute this to hydromorphone’s rapid, potent, short-acting activity, which doesn’t invite the use of other drugs (including alcohol), to help the patient achieve pain relief.  Blood levels of the hydromorphone don’t stay elevated longer than about two hours, which protects against overdose. Pain relief remains much longer, however, likely because it is hydrophilic in neurologic tissues.

In summary, I have found ultra-high potency hydromorphone to be a significant advance in palliative pain care for intractable pain patients.  It has proven to be a bonafide alternative to intrathecal opioid delivery and to high opioid dosages necessary when combining the use of long and short acting opioids.  Its unique properties seem to reduce the risk of overdose. 

Families and patients can be trained to safely and effectively use this medicinal to relieve suffering from the most severe forms of intractable pain.  Unfortunately, it is an under-recognized and underused treatment for the palliative care of intractable pain patients.

Forest Tennant, MD, DrPH, is retired from clinical practice but continues his research on the treatment of intractable pain and arachnoiditis. Readers interested in learning more about his research should visit the Tennant Foundation’s website, Arachnoiditis Hope. You can subscribe to its research bulletins here.   

The Tennant Foundation gives financial support to Pain News Network and sponsors PNN’s Patient Resources section.