An Open Letter to DEA About Banning Kratom

By Rebecca Shanks, Guest columnist

Dear DEA,

Several years ago, I was diagnosed with Ehlers Danlos syndrome and spondylolysis, which in turn caused degenerative disc disease. Like most people, I was prescribed narcotic painkillers.

At first, they prescribed MS Contin. That's a pretty powerful drug for a first time narcotic user, and it made me sick. I took back the pills and handed them to the doctor, who replaced it with methadone.

There still, I couldn't do much except zone out on the couch and sleep. I was lucky if they didn't send me to the restroom vomiting. I got tired of that, and they prescribed Percocet and Vicodin. I was to take the Percocet three times a day, and if I had breakthrough pain, I was to take a Vicodin. 

REBECCA SHANKS

After a while, like so many chronic pain sufferers, I became more than dependent on painkillers, got addicted, and found my life spiraling out of control.

In 2008, I lost everything and everyone. I lost my husband. I lost my children. I lost my home and wound up moving into a hotel room.

Finally, I was approached by my grandfather, God bless his soul, and he had a heart-to-heart talk with me that something had to change. I took his advice with tears in my eyes, and I went to rehab.

After rehab, while I was clean, the pain was becoming unbearable. Tylenol, ibuprofen and other NSAIDs that were given to me in place of narcotics did absolutely nothing.

I was scared. I knew that it would only be a matter of time before I had to go back on the pills and run the risk of addiction yet again.

That's when I met a woman who ran an herb shop and she told me about kratom. I had nothing to lose by trying it, and when I did, I was more than surprised. It worked. My pain was gone and I didn't have any of the horrible side effects of the pills that were pushed down my throat. It truly was a miracle. 

When I was in pain, I would take kratom and a few minutes later would be able to easily go back to whatever it was I was doing. There was no sleeping all day. There was no drunken fog. I have been using kratom for a few years now.  When I don’t take it, on days that my pain is not that bad, I feel nothing more than a headache.

I got my life back. I got my children back. My ex-husband and I are on very good terms, residing in the same vicinity with nary an argument between us. I have even chased the dream of being an author and have already published one book under a pen name, with two more in the works that will be released soon. I am now a productive member of society, and the mother I should have always been.

DEA, if you ban kratom, what will happen to me? Will I have to go back to the pills, run the risk of addiction once again, and be unable to do anything aside from sleep all day, or zone out on the couch? 

Will I have to just suck up the pain? In that scenario, I will still be in bed all day, screaming and crying out of sheer misery, wanting it to end. My children do not need to bear witness to that.

In any of those scenarios, I will no longer be productive, and I see myself winding up on disability, unable to work. I don't want that. The taxpayers don't want that either, not when I am doing so well on my own.

But if I choose the other route, and continue to use kratom, I become a felon. I run the risk of being shipped off to prison, for doing nothing more than trying to manage my pain while still being a productive member of society. 

So what would you have us do, DEA? Which path should I choose? Right now, I'm not sure. All I know is that I am afraid of what will happen to my life and my family should you choose to continue with this ban. 

By banning kratom, you are not hurting the drug addicts that you have a war with. You are hurting every day, productive citizens. You are hurting mothers, fathers, grandparents and other people, who you would never even know took kratom unless they told you. The plant is that mild.

DEA, I beg you to please stop this. You can stop this. Please listen to the people. 

Rebecca Shanks is the mother of two children and lives in Illinois. Under the pen name J. Theberge, she published her first book, Subject Alpha, and is currently working on two other books. When she isn't working, Rebecca is active in her children's education and promoting autism awareness.

Pain News Network invites other readers to share their stories with us.  Send them to:  editor@PainNewsNetwork.org

The information in this column should not be considered as professional medical advice, diagnosis or treatment. It is for informational purposes only and represents the author’s opinions alone. It does not inherently express or reflect the views, opinions and/or positions of Pain News Network.

Don’t Take Away My Right to Kratom

By Jennifer Sage, Guest columnist

I'm on Day 5 of a withdrawal from all of my pain and anxiety meds at the moment this is written.

I just took my morning kratom about 30 minutes ago, assisted to the kitchen with my cane, and right now I can not only walk without the cane, but have zero effects of withdrawal. A very slight headache in the first few days, on and off, but that's it.

I would like to mention I'm 35, a multiple sclerosis sufferer, and a prescribed pain med patient for 7 years. I took off my fentanyl patch on Day 1. Haven't touched a hydrocodone since Day 1. Haven't taken anything other than a tapering dose of clonazepam every other day due to the deathly dangers of stopping that cold turkey.

This plant is a miracle. I've gone through the worst of withdrawals from meds that I couldn't function on to a happy, peaceful, pain-free existence without the use of any of them.

I'm a single mom, an author of 7 published novels, a finance industry employee, and I suffered immensely every day, some days even with the meds. I have wonderful doctors and I don't believe the healthcare system has let me down because they were doing all they could to keep me as productive as possible.

I took nearly a year off work 2 years ago because the MS was unmanageable. I only wish I had known about kratom sooner.

Am I going to be a felon now because I can't live in pain and I refuse to go back to that madness of life that kept me sick instead of healing me? A felon for taking a leaf that Mother Earth provided to do this very thing?

I understand the need for regulation. Put an age limit on it. Get the junk out of the smoke shops that real users of kratom don’t use. Go into the forums and you'll see that true users of this plant are buying high quality powders that we mix in water or juice and take it like we would our very dangerous pills.

JENNIFER SAGE

My 10-year old daughter just got her mom back. If you need her testimony of what life was like before kratom and after, I'm sure she would be happy to share with you. Kratom doesn't get you high. It's self-regulating. If you take too much (which I haven't, but I hear it can happen), you just get nauseous.

I've had days where I took 80-100 mg of hydrocodone on top of my fentanyl patch and was still in bed crying. I wanted to take 100 mg more just to stop hurting. But THAT would've killed me.

They've urged me to go on oxycodone and other more powerful drugs, but I get deathly ill when I take them. This is my choice. This plant that has no abuse potential, NONE, has in 5 days changed my life.

I will always be dependent on something to ease my pain. I choose kratom to be dependent on so that I can live my days without pain, and without the fog and stress of consistently wondering when my next meds can be taken. I would give my daughter this herb over the toxic pills for children once there's more research. There are no negative effects, but there are thousands of positive ones.

DEA, your war on drugs is with the meth labs and heroin that riddle our streets. Maybe if so much manpower wasn't being spent on this peaceful, harmless plant, a 10-year old girl in New Mexico would still be alive. Meth killed her and her mother. And you're going to put kratom in the same category?

It is our right to have a voice in this country, and you are trying to take ours away. Listen to the stories. We aren't trying to get high. We're trying to live our lives.

Jennifer Sage is an internationally acclaimed fantasy romance author, mother, advocate for healthy living, active hiker and, more recently, a user of kratom. Jennifer’s most recent book is The Last Valkyrie. You can learn more about her by clicking here.

Pain News Network invites other readers to share their stories with us.  Send them to:  editor@PainNewsNetwork.org

The information in this column should not be considered as professional medical advice, diagnosis or treatment. It is for informational purposes only and represents the author’s opinions alone. It does not inherently express or reflect the views, opinions and/or positions of Pain News Network.

Lawmakers Ask DEA to Delay Kratom Ban

By Pat Anson, Editor

A bipartisan group of nearly 50 congressmen have signed a letter asking the U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration to delay a decision that would classify kratom as a Schedule I controlled substance, a move that would make the sale and possession of the herb a felony offense.

The letter, which is being sent to acting DEA administrator Charles Rosenberg, was written and circulated on Capitol Hill by Rep. Mark Pocan (D-Wisconsin) and Rep. Matt Salmon (R-Arizona). A second letter is being sent to Shaun Donovan, the director of the Office of Management and Budget (OMB), urging him to use his “statutory authority” to delay the DEA’s regulatory action.

“While Republicans and Democrats are having a difficult time seeing eye-to-eye on many critical issues, and in the midst of a very busy election cycle, it is unprecedented to see so many join forces together, agreeing that the DEA has overstepped its emergency scheduling authority,” said Susan Ash, founder of the American Kratom Association, a consumer group lobbying against the DEA scheduling.

The letters are signed by 28 Democrats and 21 Republicans in the House, including two physicians, Rep. Daniel Banishek (R-Michigan) and Rep. Brad Wenstrup (R-Ohio).

"We urge the DEA to delay finalizing the decision to define Kratom as a schedule I substance under the Controlled Substances Act and to engage consumers, researchers, and other stakeholders, in keeping with well-established protocol for such matters,” states the letter to the DEA administrator. 

"A departure from such guidelines threatens the transparency of the scheduling process and its responsiveness to the input of both citizens and the scientific community."

Under its emergency scheduling order, the DEA said it would classify kratom as a Schedule I substance – alongside heroin, LSD and marijuana – without any public notice or comment. The order could be implemented as early as September 30.  The DEA maintains that kratom – which comes from the leaves of a tree that grows in Southeast Asia -- poses “an imminent hazard to public safety” and has been linked to several deaths.

In a survey of over 6,000 kratom consumers by Pain News Network and the American Kratom Association, 98 percent said kratom was not a harmful or dangerous substance and 95% said banning the herb will have a harmful effect on society.  Many said they use the herb in teas and supplements to treat chronic pain, anxiety, depression and other medical conditions.

The congressional letter to OMB director Donovan points out that the National Institutes of Health has funded kratom research at the University of Massachusetts and the University of Mississippi. Those studies led researchers to apply for a patent identifying mitragynine – an active ingredient in kratom -- as a useful treatment for opioid addiction.

“The DEA’s decision to place Kratom as a Schedule I substance will put a halt on federally funded research and innovation surrounding the treatment of individuals suffering from opioid and other addictions—a significant public health threat,” the letter to Donovan states. “We urge your agency to immediately utilize your statutory authority and delay the process to place Kratom in schedule I until sufficient public comment is received and inconsistencies between Federal Agencies view of the product are addressed.”

It’s unclear what impact the two letters will have, but kratom supporters hope the involvement of a bipartisan group of congressmen will put more political pressure on the Obama administration. A citizens petition to the White House urging the administration to delay the DEA decision has been signed by over 135,000 people.  

“This will send a very clear message that Congress will not sit idly by and allow grandparents, parents, disabled people, and professionals in everything from law enforcement to the medical field, to be turned into felons for responsibly using the one thing that provides them with relief,” said Susan Ash.

“Kratom can help ease suffering. While our nation is in the midst of the worst opiate and heroin epidemic crisis we've ever seen, this little plant holds the key to many Americans' health and well-being and is helping to reduce the staggering, terrifying rise in opiate overdose deaths.”

DEA Head Calls Kratom an "Opioid"

None of this has apparently swayed the acting administrator of the DEA, who called kratom an "opioid" at a recent public forum on opioid addiction at Georgetown University.

"Kratom, as you know, is an opioid in its classification, so this is a good place to talk about it,"  Charles Rosenberg said in response to a student's question.

Kratom is not a member of the opium poppy family, where traditional opioids come from. But kratom leaves do contain mitragynine and 7-hydroxymitragynine, alkaloids that act on the same receptors in the brain as opioids. For that reason, the DEA is calling kratom an opioid.

"The FDA has decided, ruled, after its considered judgement that there is no medical value. We are bound by its scientific determinations in that arena. It's in Schedule I therefore because it has no medical value, there is a high potential for abuse, and most importantly we're now getting data from folks around the country that people are dying from kratom overdoses," Rosenberg explained. "So if we made an error and perhaps some people think we did, I frankly do not, then we aired on the side of protecting the public and I'm okay with that."

Below is a list of congressmen who have signed the letters to Rosenberg and Donovan:

  • Mark Pocan - D - WI
  • Matt Salmon - R - AZ
  • John Conyers - D - MI
  • Hank Johnson - D - GA
  • Tim Ryan - D - OH
  • Jared Polis - D - CO
  • Adam Smith - D - WA
  • Dana Rohrabacher - R - CA
  • Daniel Benishek, MD - R - MI
  • Steve Cohen - D - TN
  • Joe Heck, D.O. - R - NV
  • John Yarmuth - D - KY
  • Mark Sandord - R - SC
  • Mick Mulvaney - R - SC
  • Steve Israel - D - NY
  • Gerald E. Connolly - D - VA
  • Betty McCollum - D - MN
  • Earl Blumenauer - D - OR
  • Tulsi Gabbard - D - HI
  • Michael Honda - D - CA
  • Gwen Moore - D - WI
  • Brad Wenstrup, MD - R - OH
  • Tom Graves - R - GA
  • Justin Amash - R - MI
  • Barbara Lee - D - CA
  • Raul Labrador - R - ID
  • Peter DeFazio - D - OR
  • Scott Tipton - D - CO
  • Julia Brownley - D - CA
  • H. Morgan Griffith - R - VA
  • Jim Costa - D - CA
  • Suzan DelBene - D - WA
  • Denny Heck - D - WA
  • Zoe Lofgren - D - CA
  • Scott Peters - D - CA
  • Suzanne Bonamici - D - OR
  • Ted Poe - R - TX
  • Dave Brat - R - VA
  • Tom Emmer - R - MN
  • Paul Gosar - R - AZ
  • MIchael Capuano - D - MA
  • Bobby Scott - D - VA
  • Steve King - R - IA
  • Lois Frankel - D - FL
  • Leonard Lance - R - NJ
  • Frank LoBiondo - R - NJ
  • Steve King - R - IA
  • Barry Loudermilk - R - GA
  • Richard Hudson - R- NC

Survey: Kratom ‘Very Effective’ for Chronic Pain

By Pat Anson, Editor

Chronic pain sufferers often struggle to find a treatment that works. Opioids dull the pain, but come with the risk of addiction; drugs like Lyrica and Cymbalta can have unwelcome side effects; over-the-counter pain relievers often don’t work for severe pain; and alternative treatments like massage and acupuncture are not always covered by insurance.

So people experiment and try different things – often settling for something that just takes the edge off their pain.

That brings us to kratom, an herbal supplement largely unknown to most pain patients and their doctors. At a recent pain management conference attended by thousands of practitioners, I could find only a handful of doctors who’d even heard of kratom. I’ll confess I didn’t know much about it myself until a few months ago.

Maybe we should all start paying more attention.

In an online survey of 6,150 kratom consumers by Pain News Network and the American Kratom Association, nine out of ten said the herb was a “very effective” treatment for pain, depression, anxiety, insomnia, opioid addiction and alcoholism.

Less than one percent said it did not help.

This was not a scientific study by any means on the safety and efficacy of kratom. It was an online survey of self-selected kratom consumers, many of them quite upset that the U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration is planning to make the sale and possession of kratom illegal, perhaps as soon as the end of the month.

In a 21-page notice published in the Federal Register, the DEA said kratom does not have "an approved medical use” and “is misused to self-treat chronic pain.”

WAS KRATOM EFFECTIVE IN TREATING YOUR PAIN OR MEDICAL CONDITION?

The agency cited no studies to support its claim that kratom was being “misused” to treat pain, so we decided to ask the people who actually use it:

"Honestly, I was blown away at how good it was for my pain and also had the benefit that it lifted my mood, which was important because of the depression I had been experiencing from the chronic pain."

"This natural approach to pain management has allowed me to work full time as a school teacher and be an actively involved mom. These are things I never thought I would be able to have in my life as a result of debilitating pain from a neurological condition for which there is no medical cure."

"I have acute chronic migraines that, unmedicated, result in pain that is completely debilitating, and at times have landed me in the emergency room with stroke symptoms. Multiple doctors have okayed my use of kratom for pain management, as over-the-counter medicine simply does not work and I cannot take opiates."

"My wife has fibromyalgia and has taken kratom for more than 12 years with no adverse effects. Prior to finding kratom, she had tried all of the medication that was prescribed to her. The prescription medication either didn't work, or the side effects outweighed the benefits. Kratom has been a godsend for my wife and has allowed her to function as a mother of 4 children for more than a decade."

"I have been living with chronic pain from multiple reconstructive foot surgeries for 20+ years. Kratom not only effectively treats my pain, but it enabled me to tell my doctor that I no longer wanted my monthly tramadol prescription."

What pain conditions does kratom work best on? Again, this is not a scientific study, and we don’t have a lot of data for certain conditions. For example, 100% of the people who used kratom for cancer pain said it was “very effective” for them, but we only had 27 respondents who identified cancer as the primary reason they used kratom.

On the flip side, over 1,700 respondents said they used kratom for back pain, so the data is probably more reliable for them. And 92% said kratom was very effective for back pain.  

Percentage Who Rated Kratom “Very Effective” for their Pain Condition

powdered kratom

  • 100% Cancer
  •   97% Multiple Sclerosis
  •   94% Irritable Bowel Syndrome
  •   93% Migraine
  •   93% Fibromyalgia
  •   92% Rheumatoid Arthritis
  •   92% Back pain
  •   92% Acute Pain
  •   91% Lupus and other autoimmune diseases
  •   90% Osteoarthritis
  •   90% Neuropathy
  •   88% Trigeminal Neuralgia
  •   79% RSD or CRPS
  •   76% Ehlers Danlos syndrome   

Quite a few people said they use kratom for pain conditions we didn’t ask about or discovered that it helped them feel better in unexpected ways:

"I tried kratom for many things and it has worked for all. Toothaches, back and knee pain, sore joints and ligaments, flu symptoms, and insomnia."

"I have had very little back pain since I starting taking kratom to treat it. Three side effects I didn't expect is that it eliminated my restless leg syndrome, reduced my blood pressure to a normal level and significantly reduced my overall cholesterol levels."

"I have found so much relief for my ulcerative colitis and carpal tunnel syndrome from this plant that I fear how my body will respond when I no longer have it."

"I use kratom for severe TMJ disorder and sacroiliac joint dysfunction. I am also a recovering addict, and kratom has helped me stay clean and be the best 4th grade teacher I can be. If I hadn't had kratom to help ease chronic pain and the urge to use, I wouldn't be doing my dream job. I'd probably be in jail without a job, divorced, and possibly even dead."

"Kratom without a doubt helps any part of my body to not be in pain. Not only does it help with pain, it helps with my depression and it helps me get to sleep very easily."

Many also have strong feelings about allowing drug companies to use kratom in pharmaceutical products, which would require approval from the Food and Drug Administration. 

Seven out of ten kratom consumers are opposed to that idea, believing drug makers have conspired with the DEA to make kratom illegal.

"This is big pharma using the DEA to eliminate an all-natural herb that is taking a bite out of their drug selling profits."

"Everyone knows all this has to do with the DEA and big pharma being in each other’s back pockets. Money is the root of all evil and here it shows again."

"I feel that the pharmaceutical companies are behind this. People are weaning themselves from their addictions and those that don't end up overdosing requiring Narcan. That is a lot of money they stand to lose."

"If pharmaceutical companies produce kratom, the cost will probably triple. There will be tremendous red tape in even getting the drug from a doctor."

SHOULD DRUG MAKERS BE ALLOWED TO PRODUCE AND MARKET KRATOM?

To see the complete survey results, click here.

Meanwhile, lobbying efforts continue by the American Kratom Association to get the DEA to postpone its decision to classify the two active ingredients in kratom as controlled substances. Two congressmen, Rep. Mark Pocan (D-Wisconsin) and Rep. Matt Salmon (R-Arizona) are circulating a letter on Capitol Hill urging the DEA to delay enacting its order.

“We hope to see a lot of congressmen and women sign onto this,” says Susan Ash, founder of the American Kratom Association. “The letter asks that the director of the Office of Management and Budget and the acting director of the DEA delay a final decision on the placement of kratom as a Schedule I substance, provide ample time for public comment on this significant decision, and resolve any other inconsistencies with other federal agencies.”

A similar letter is being prepared by a law firm hired by the American Kratom Association. Ash told PNN it’s possible the DEA will not formally act on the scheduling of kratom until well after September 30.   

“When we’ve looked back at some of the other emergency scheduling processes that have happened, we have found that they will say it’s going to happen in 30 days, but it’s usually a few weeks after that. That’s just what’s happened historically. We don’t think September 30 is essentially a firm date, just based on history, but we are prepared in case it is.”

Ash said her organization would seek a restraining order from a judge if the emergency scheduling is implemented by DEA.

Kratom Users Say Ban Will Lead to More Drug Abuse

By Pat Anson, Editor

Kratom is a safe and surprisingly effective treatment for chronic pain and a wide variety of medical conditions, according to a large new survey of kratom consumers. Many say banning the herbal supplement will only lead to more drug abuse and worsen the nation’s opioid epidemic.

The online survey of 6,150 kratom consumers by Pain News Network and the American Kratom Association was conducted after plans were announced by the U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration to classify two chemicals in kratom as a Schedule I controlled substances. Unless the scheduling is postponed, the sale and possession of kratom could become a felony as early as September 30.

The survey findings dispel the myth that kratom is used recreationally like marijuana by people who only want to get “high” or intoxicated. The vast majority say they use the herb in teas and supplements solely to treat their medical conditions.

Asked what was the primary reason they used kratom, over half (51%) said they used the herb as a treatment for chronic pain, followed by anxiety (14%), depression (9%), opioid addiction (9%) and alcoholism (3%). Less than two percent said they used kratom recreationally or out of curiosity.

WHAT IS THE PRIMARY REASON YOU USE KRATOM?

“The survey tells us exactly what we’ve been trying to tell the DEA, lawmakers and the general public. The average kratom consumer is nothing like we are being portrayed as,” says Susan Ash, founder of the American Kratom Association.

“The average kratom consumer is a man or woman in their 40’s, 50’s or 60’s, who is primarily looking for alternatives to pharmaceutical drugs that either didn’t work for them or had side effects that were unbearable. The survey clearly shows the majority of people are using kratom to manage chronic medical conditions.”

Nine out of ten patients (90%) said kratom was very effective in treating their pain or medical conditions.

Asked if they get high from using kratom, three out of four consumers (75%) said no and 23% said “a little.” Only about 2 percent said they get high from using the herb. Many likened the stimulative effect of kratom to a strong cup of coffee.

"I only take enough kratom to take the edge off. I never get high like I did on pills or marijuana. Just a clearer state of being with some pain relief."

"It's not possible to get high from kratom as that's not what it does. It is in the same family as coffee and acts just like coffee."

"It elevates my mood, gives me energy and helps with the pain."

"I was stable at all times with kratom. Sound minded and alert. In no negative way did it affect my ability to function. If anything, it improved that and my overall happiness in life."

CAN YOU GET "HIGH" FROM KRATOM?

While the DEA maintains that kratom poses “an imminent hazard to public safety” and has been linked to several deaths, the vast majority of kratom consumers believe it is safe to use.

Ninety-eight percent said kratom was not a harmful or dangerous substance and 95% said banning the herb will have a harmful effect on society.

Many have strong feelings about what will happen if kratom is made illegal.

"I believe this is incredibly harmful to the thousands of people who have been able to find relief from a huge variety of issues, but especially those treating an opioid addiction. Those people will be forced back to opiates."

"I believe that the ban on kratom will trigger the biggest uptick in opiate-related deaths that we've seen in decades."

"Banning kratom will in no way protect society from an imminent health hazard, but actually push society further into the deadly opiate epidemic that plagues America today."

"It will kill people if they make kratom Illegal."

"We must utilize every tool possible to combat addiction to dangerous drugs, and banning kratom is like cutting off your nose to spite the face: stupid and unproductive."

WILL BANNING KRATOM BE HELPFUL OR HARMFUL TO SOCIETY?

Given a variety of scenarios on what could happen if kratom becomes illegal, two out of three respondents (66%) said kratom consumer would be more likely to become addicted and overdose on other substances.

Over half (52%) predicted that kratom users would be more likely turn to illegal drugs such as heroin and illicit fentanyl.

Half (51%) also said kratom consumers would be more likely to consider suicide.

Asked what they would do personally if kratom is banned, one out of four (27%) said they would seek to buy kratom on the black market – indicating that many are willing to risk being charged with a felony rather than give up kratom. Less than a third (30%) said they would not buy kratom on the black market.

"Making kratom illegal isn't going to stop people from buying and taking kratom."

"People who want kratom bad enough will find it and keep using it."

"I believe kratom consumers are likely to try multiple strategies, but most likely they will go back to whatever they used prior to kratom and there will likely be a black market for illegal consumption because none of these other options can compete with the efficacy of kratom."

"We will all be forced to go back on the very drugs that kratom helped us get off of! It will kill a whole lot of people! It will undoubtedly cause an increase in suicides, overdoses of illegal drugs like heroin and morphine."

"Banning this leaf is equivocal to signing the death certificates of many. You may as well be sticking the needle into many arms."

IF KRATOM BECOMES ILLEGAL, WOULD YOU SEEK TO BUY IT ON THE BLACK MARKET?

Susan Ash of the American Kratom Assocation estimates that between 3 and 5 million Americans have tried kratom. And she thinks the DEA’s attempt to ban the herb may have actually led more people to try it.

“Probably a quarter of a million have tried it since they put this notice out,” Ash said.

To see the complete survey results, click here.

Click here to see a report on the effectiveness of kratom in treating specific chronic pain conditions such as fibromyalgia, migraines and back pain.

Why I Prefer Kratom Over Pharmaceutical Drugs

By William Johnson, Guest columnist

I've experienced much of what's wrong with our healthcare system and can think of only one possible solution people can do for themselves when it comes to pain management, which leads to another matter as well.

Kratom works well for pain and you don't need a prescription to buy this centuries old remedy from Southeast Asia. Did I say buy? Yes I did, which leads to the other matter. The Drug Enforcement Administration is currently in the process of classifying the leaf from this tree into a Schedule I drug, meaning no one will be able to prescribe it, much less buy it inside the United States.

At this very moment, thousands are telling and retelling their stories about kratom, trying to save it from the axe of the DEA; how it saved their lives or helped them stop taking pharmaceutical drugs that have horrible side effects, such as Xanax, OxyContin, Klonopin, Paxil and many others.

I was unaware of this plant until three months ago, when I first began taking kratom. I was fed up with pain clinics, tired of being treated like a criminal, and tired of waiting for hours each month just to have a prescription renewed.

I was also tired of the adverse side effects from long term opiate use. Those include, but are not limited to, depression, lack of motivation, liver damage, and severe constipation. Sound familiar to anyone?

I've made some other discoveries along the way as well. My recent annual blood work to test liver function returned to normal for the first time in over a decade, after I contracted Hepatitis C at a dentist’s office.

william johnson

Not only that, while it relieved most of my pain from several conditions of the spine, ones I was told would require long term opiate use for the rest of my life, it also adequately treated the symptoms of Hepatitis C, like chronic fatigue, joint pain and a host of others common to those with this virus.

My doctor was amazed when he found out I was consuming kratom, a botanical he'd never heard of. He began to research it and concluded the same thing as I. Kratom is the most likely cause that my liver functions are normal. He's never seen this with any patient with such a high viral load, not to mention the Hepatitis-C, which also managed to give me stage three Cirrhosis.

Unheard of, you say? Needs more study, right?

Every kratom researcher to date has recommended more study on its potential benefits, but now the DEA comes along saying kratom presents an imminent danger to public health -- even though it cannot identify a single death associated with kratom use alone.

One of the points I'm hoping to make is that there are viable alternatives for pain sufferers that don't include dealing with the healthcare system. And because more patients are learning about kratom, costing the industry million upon millions of dollars, DEA has stepped in to ban kratom for its pharmaceutical buddies, using outright false information in the process.

For more on that, click here to see a letter to the DEA from the Center for Regulatory Effectiveness.

And if you haven’t already, sign the petition to the White House opposing the DEA action.

While we're not going to fix the influence money has on the healthcare industry in a day, a week or even years, one thing we can do is remove as much of our business from that industry as possible. If herbal remedies work as well or better, I strongly suggest we work to keep them legal. Western medicine doesn't have all the answers and it might serve the public interests if we begin to realize this.

William Johnson lives in Virginia. He is a retired urban planner, who advocates for organic farming and gardening.

Pain News Network invites other readers to share their stories with us.  Send them to:  editor@PainNewsNetwork.org

The information in this column should not be considered as professional medical advice, diagnosis or treatment. It is for informational purposes only and represents the author’s opinions alone. It does not inherently express or reflect the views, opinions and/or positions of Pain News Network.

Kratom Supporters Rally at White House

By Pat Anson, Editor

Hundreds of protestors chanting “kratom saves lives” and “I am kratom” rallied in front of the White House today, hoping to turn their passion for an herb into a movement that stops the Drug Enforcement Administration from making kratom illegal.

“This stuff saved my life. It gave me my life back,” said one protestor.

Kratom comes from the leaves of a tree that grows in southeast Asia, where it has been used for centuries as a natural medicine. In recent years, kratom has grown in popularity in the United States, where it is made into teas and supplements as a treatment for pain, depression, anxiety and addiction.

All of that may change on September 30th, when the DEA plans to schedule the two main active ingredients in kratom as Schedule I controlled substances -- alongside heroin and LSD. That would effectively make the sale and possession of kratom a felony.

Under its emergency scheduling order, the DEA invited no public comment and held no public hearings.

“Stop this ban immediately. You’re trying to protect your jobs. You’re not trying to save Americans,” said Ryan Connor, a military veteran who lost a sister to a heroin overdose. “If you take away this herb, more and more people are going to die."

Connor said he uses kratom to treat his own opioid addiction.

image courtesy american kratom assn.

“I’ve been on every opioid under the sun. I was on Suboxone. I was told it was a cure for addiction, but it did not cure my addiction. In fact, it made it worse. I used kratom to get off Suboxone. It was painless. I had zero side effects from it. And I think as Americans we have the right to choose our health over getting poisoned by pharmaceuticals,” Connor said.

In a notice published in the Federal Register, the DEA said an emergency scheduling of kratom was necessary because it has no approved medical use. The DEA claimed the herb was being used recreationally for its "psychoactive effects" and as a substitute for heroin.

The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention also issued a report last month calling kratom "an emerging public health threat." The agency said there were 660 calls to U.S. poison control centers about kratom in the last six years. About 8 percent of the calls involved a life threatening condition. One death was reported.

courtesy patti belmont

Kratom supporters say the death was more likely caused by prescription drugs and that kratom actually saves lives.

“It changed my life. It rescued me from a very severe addiction to narcotics. It took me out of a home and bed-bound existence. It gave me the energy and pain control that I needed,” said Susan Ash, who founded the American Kratom Association, which organized the rally outside the White House.

“We want a regular scheduling process that involves public comment and the best available science, and not just a note from the CDC that said they got all of 660 calls to poison control when they’re getting three to four million calls a year. How do 660 calls make an emerging public health threat?”

Kratom supporters have gotten over 120,000 signatures on an online petition asking the Obama administration to stop the DEA from scheduling kratom as a Schedule I substance. Under its "We the People" petition rules, the administration promises to "take action" on a petition within 60 days if supporters are able to gather at least 100,000 signatures.   

According to the website whpetitions.info, the average response time for a successful White House petition is well over 100 days – not 60 days. Six petitions -- including the kratom petition -- are currently waiting for a response.

Meanwhile, the Center for Regulatory Effectiveness (CRE), a government watchdog group, has asked the DEA to postpone the scheduling of kratom.

In a September 12 letter to acting DEA Administrator Charles Rosenberg, a CRE official pointed out that the National Institutes of Health has conducted research to explore the therapeutic value of kratom as a treatment for chronic pain and substance abuse.

“The research was so well conducted and received by the scientific community that the aforementioned institutions applied for a patent. How much more additional evidence is needed to demonstrate that the DEA has acted arbitrarily in issuing a ban on kratom?” asked Jim Tozzi, a member of the CRE Board of Advisors.

In short, without going through a notice and comment process, DEA is obviating another agency’s research that was conducted with appropriated funds. With its action, DEA is also obviating the progress and promise of kratom research to boosting the American bio-sciences industry.”

Tozzi’s letter said the DEA’s “rush to judgement” may have violated the federal Data Information Quality Act and was a “clear and flagrant abuse of discretion.”

He asked the DEA to extend the effective date for scheduling kratom to July 1, 2017, to allow for public comment and a peer review of the science behind the agency’s decision.

Kratom Petition Reaches Goal, But Now What?

By Pat Anson, Editor

Supporters of a citizens' petition that calls on the Obama administration to reverse a decision that will make the sale and possession of kratom illegal have reached their goal of 100,000 signatures.

But the move is largely symbolic and will probably not prevent the Drug Enforcement Administration from classifying kratom as a Schedule I controlled substance at the end of the month.

The DEA filed notice in the federal register last week for an emergency scheduling of mitragynine and 7-hydroxymitragynine, the two main active ingredients in kratom, which comes from the leaves of a tree that grows in southeast Asia.

Kratom is used in teas and supplements as a natural treatment for pain, depression, anxiety and other medical conditions. The DEA claims kratom is also used recreationally for its "psychoactive effects" and has even been used as a substitute for heroin. Kratom supporters say its no stronger than a cup of coffee.

Under its "We the People" petition rules, the Obama Administration promises to "take action" on an issue whenever supporters are able to gather at least 100,000 signatures online within 30 days.

"We will do our best to respond to petitions that cross the signature threshold within 60 days, however, depending on the topic and the overall volume of petitions from We the People, responses may be delayed," the White House says in a statement on its website.

According to the website whpetitions.info, the average response time for a successful petition is 118 days. Six petitions -- including the kratom petition -- are currently waiting for a response.

Barring a last minute legal challenge, the DEA scheduling of kratom as a controlled substance, alongside heroin, LSD and marijuana, will begin September 30.

"This may go into effect before we get a response from the White House," says Susan Ash, founder of the American Kratom Association, a volunteer organization of kratom users. "That's one of the reasons why we are doing our rally September 13th in front of the White House, so that we can bring this issue to their attention prior to them being required to give us a response."

The Obama administration began hosting "We the People" petitions on the White House website in 2011. Although the petitions have been criticized as a public relations gimmick, some have resulted in federal action, such as legislation allowing consumers to use their mobile devices on any network they choose.

At other times, however, the White House response to a petition has been a statement that only reaffirms current policy. That was the case in 2011, when petitioners asked the administration to legalize marijuana.

"Like many, we are interested in the potential marijuana may have in providing relief to individuals diagnosed with certain serious illnesses," wrote Gil Kerlikowske, Director of the Office of National Drug Control Policy, in the official White House response to the petition.

"That is why we ardently support ongoing research into determining what components of the marijuana plant can be used as medicine. To date, however, neither the FDA nor the Institute of Medicine have found smoked marijuana to meet the modern standard for safe or effective medicine for any condition."

The DEA is taking a similar stance on kratom, saying it has no medically accepted use.

 

Should the DEA Ban Kratom? Take Our Survey

By Pat Anson, Editor

A natural supplement that most Americans are not familiar with is suddenly being thrust into the national spotlight and debate over opioid addiction.

Nearly 70,000 people have signed a White House petition and many are planning to attend a rally next week in Washington DC to protest plans by the DEA to classify a kratom as an illegal narcotic.

Kratom comes from the leaves of a tree that grows in southeast Asia, where it has been used for centuries as a natural medicine. Only in recent years has kratom caught on in the United States – where the leaves are used in teas and supplements to treat pain, depression, anxiety and even addiction.

Since the DEA’s surprise decision was announced, many kratom supporters have written us saying that kratom is far more effective and safer than pharmaceutical drugs.

“I was amazed at the pain relief, energy, anxiety relief, and mood boost that it gave me,” wrote Connie Fuller, a high school teacher and mother of two who suffers from arthritis, fibromyalgia, back pain and other chronic conditions. “I still feel pain 24/7 but it’s quite tolerable most days and I gladly smile again. We MUST keep kratom legal so that I can keep my life.”

“I'm a kratom user of two years and my life has dramatically improved. I'm so scared about this. Not sure what I'm going to do. I don't want to be on pharmaceuticals again. But I don't want to be a criminal either,” said Jordan.

Is kratom really the “hazard to public safety” that the DEA says it is? Does it make people high? Where is the evidence that it actually works?

In an effort to answer some of these questions, Pain News Network has partnered with the American Kratom Association in an online survey to see why people use kratom, whether it is effective, and what they plan on doing if the sale and possession of kratom is criminalized by the DEA.  

(Update: The survey is now closed. The results will be released September 20)

“The CDC, DEA and other federal agencies, as well as the media, believe that we are nothing but a bunch of teenagers or young adults who are only using kratom on a recreational basis and are abusing it,” says Susan Ash, who founded the American Kratom Association. “That is simply not the case. Our members are largely people in their 40’s, 50’s and 60’s. We have a lot of soccer moms, firefighters, lawyers and lobbyists who are members. To paint a truer picture of the kind of people that are using this product medicinally, this survey will be helpful in showing that we’re not the kind of people that they think we are.”

The DEA notice published in the Federal Register last week will classify the two main active ingredients in kratom -- mitragynine and 7-hydroxymitragynine -- as Schedule I controlled substances, the same classification used for heroin, LSD and marijuana.

Although mitragynine and 7-hydroxymitragynine are alkaloids, the DEA took the unusual step of calling them “opioid substances,” even though they don’t originate from the poppy plant like other opioid pain medications. The DEA saidkratom has “a high potential for abuse” and was linked to several deaths.

“In the United States, kratom is misused to self-treat chronic pain and opioid withdrawal symptoms, with users reporting its effects to be comparable to prescription opioids. Users have also reported dose-dependent psychoactive effects to include euphoria, simultaneous stimulation and relaxation, analgesia, vivid dreams, and sedation,”  the DEA said.

“They did that on purpose,” says Ash. “They put ‘opioid’ in there to get sympathy from all of the Congress people already working on this issue, who will look at that Federal Register notice and say ‘Oh my God, another opioid.’ We need to ban it.”   

Another unusual aspect of the DEA action is that there was no public notice or comment period, as there usually is when a controlled substance is scheduled. It will become illegal to possess or sell mitragynine and 7-hydroxymitragynine – in other words, kratom itself – at the end of September.

“This emergency scheduling only gives people 30 days to come up with a solution. Most people can’t even get in to see their doctors in 30 days,” says Ash. “They’re putting tens of thousands of people in a position where they have to decide 'Do I go back to pharmaceuticals?' and 'Do I even have time to see my doctor?'

“We’re leaving people completely in the lurch that count on kratom for their health and well-being. People have been using kratom safely for years and these people are basically being told you need to cut off your use abruptly.”

Ash says the American Kratom Association is meeting with lawyers to pursue every possible legal avenue to stop or delay the DEA's scheduling process. She’s also hopeful that grassroots action, the rally in Washington, and the results of our survey will help educate the public and media about kratom’s benefits.  

 

Outrage Over DEA’s Kratom Decision

By Pat Anson, Editor

Mitragyna speciose has some fans out there.

Tens of thousands of people who use kratom supplements – made from the leaves of the Mitragyna speciose tree that grows in southeast Asia – are furious over a decision by the U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration to classify two chemicals in kratom as Schedule I controlled substances, right alongside heroin, LSD and marijuana.

The DEA said the move is necessary because the two main active ingredients in kratom -- mitragynine and 7-hydroxymitragynine – are not approved as drugs and pose “an imminent hazard to public safety.” The DEA filed notice in the federal register that it plans to implement the decision at the end of the month and make kratom illegal, despite a growing public outcry.

“People are going to die because of this,” said James, one of dozens of Pain News Network readers who wrote to tell us that kratom supplements relieve their chronic pain, depression and anxiety, and also helps ease withdrawal symptoms from opioid and alcohol dependence.

“An herb that has killed no one is being banned. Many people will turn to more dangerous drugs, and others who are already addicted to opiates will not have the option of using kratom to quit,” James wrote.

“This is ridiculous! Did we learn anything from alcohol prohibition? It gave us illegal moonshine, bath tub gin and other dangerous concoctions that caused blindness and death,” wrote Bob Thompson.

“I know many people who have used and are still using kratom for pain and/or to get themselves off of drugs such as Suboxone and methadone,” said Jennifer. “It’s been a life saver for so many people, helping them have a better quality of life and not be dependent on the highly addictive crap like Oxycontin & hydrocodone. The DEA is such an evil empire.”

KRATOM SUPPLEMENTS

Many readers see a dark conspiracy behind the DEA’s action -- a scheme engineered by the pharmaceutical industry to eliminate a cheap competitor.

“I am pretty sure that the government wants to ban kratom to use it in pharmaceuticals later,” said Marlo.  “They want it for themselves so they can eventually charge large amounts of money (for a) prescription form after the police have ‘cleaned up the streets’ from it.“

“The government is doing everything they can to keep people on pharma drugs and away from natural supplements,” said Rachel. “I am so sick of big pharma, big government, a broken medical system and the loss of personal freedom to choose what is best for oneself.”

“This is unbelievable. Our government is straight up sinister,” wrote Dan. “To take a plant that is so benign, with very limited side effects, that helps people with pain management and that helps others get off of hard drugs, and to make it illegal in the same category as meth and heroin is criminal.”

Whether you buy into the conspiracy theories or not, the fact is thousands of law-abiding citizens who’ve been buying kratom online and in health food stores for years have been shocked into the sudden realization that after September 30 they could be at risk of arrest, fines and imprisonment for violating the Controlled Substance Act. 

In less than a week, over 50,000 people signed a WhiteHouse.gov petition asking the Obama administration to stop the DEA from scheduling kratom as a Schedule I narcotic.

The American Kratom Association has also threatened a lawsuit and is planning a march on the White House on September 13th.

Is the DEA listening?

A post on a DEA Twitter account Friday acknowledged the agency “has heard from 100s of #kratom supporters in the past 2 days about the proposed scheduling action; we thank you for the feedback.”

But the odds of the DEA reversing course appear slim. The agency’s announcement Tuesday in the Federal Register clearly states that a public notice and comment period usually required under Section 553 of the federal Administrative Procedure Act “do not apply to this notice.”

The (DEA) Administrator finds that there is good cause to forgo the notice and comment requirements of section 553, as any further delays in the process for issuance of temporary scheduling orders would be impracticable and contrary to the public interest in view of the manifest urgency to avoid an imminent hazard to the public safety,” the notice states.

Is there a public safety hazard?

According to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, kratom poses an “emerging public health threat,” although the evidence cited by the CDC in a report last month seems almost laughable.  The agency said there was a grand total of 660 calls to U.S. poison control centers about kratom in the last six years. Less than 8 percent of the calls involved a major life threatening condition and only one death was reported – a person who ingested antidepressant and anticonvulsant medications in addition to kratom.

As an article in Forbes points out, those 660 calls to poison control centers pale in comparison to the 6,843 kids who swallowed laundry detergent packets in the first seven months of this year.

But some say the DEA’s action is long overdue.

“This is a necessary and welcome step, but unless it is followed with real enforcement and penalties for those who are selling (kratom) in coffee bars, on the internet, and elsewhere, it will be toothless,” said Dan Frabricant, CEO and Executive Director of the Natural Products Association, an industry trade group.

“Kratom is not an herbal supplement: it is addictive, harmful, and worse, it may be contributing to America’s opiate epidemic. We are eager to work with the authorities and our members to help turn the tide against Kratom and ensure that it is seen as what the DEA says it is, a schedule I illegal narcotic that has no place in health or wellness.”

Can anything stop the DEA?

“We have spoken with many people who have been advised by lawyers that the most effective way to combat this is by having each individual who has a care for this cause to contact your congressman,” the American Kratom Association said in a statement. “Congressional action is needed to show the lies and false science issued about this plant in order to protect big pharmaceutical company. It is important to call in a polite manner and just share your story in a positive way.”

 

DEA Banning All Sales of Kratom

By Pat Anson, Editor

The U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration has announced plans to ban all sales of kratom, a popular herbal supplement increasingly being used as an alternative to opioids for relieving chronic pain.

The DEA filed notice in the federal register that it plans to classify two opioid-like chemicals in kratom as Schedule I drugs under the Controlled Substances Act – the same classification given to heroin, LSD and marijuana. Kratom is currently considered a food supplement, not a drug, but the move would effectively prohibit all sales of kratom, which comes from the leaves of a tree grown in southeast Asia.

The founder of the American Kratom Association told Pain News Network that her organization may go to court to block the DEA from carrying out its plan.

"This honestly was a complete and total shock for those of us involved in this issue," said Susan Ash. "We're weighing all of our options right now and one option of course is to seek a temporary restraining order."

The two main active ingredients in kratom, mitragynine and 7-hydroxymitragynine, act on the same receptors in the brain as opioids do, but are not currently approved as drugs.

The DEA said it needed to classify them temporarily as controlled substances “to avoid an imminent hazard to public safety.”

“Available information indicates that these opioid substances, constituents of the plant kratom, have a high potential for abuse, no currently accepted medical use in treatment in the United States, and a lack of accepted safety for use under medical supervision,” the DEA said.

“Consequently, kratom, which contains the main active constituents mitragynine and 7-hydroxymitragynine, is an increasingly popular drug of abuse and readily available on the recreational drug market in the United States. Attempted importations of kratom are routinely misdeclared and falsely labeled. This is similar to other attempts to import controlled substances or substances intended to mimic controlled substances.”

Although the DEA refers to mitragynine and 7-hydroxymitragynine as "opioids," they are actually alkaline compounds that are believed to act on natural opioid receptors in the brain.

"They're not opioids. An opioid is a synthetic version of the poppy plant, so that's just completely wrong," said Ash. "They are novel substances that I really don't think you can define, quite honestly. There's nothing else like them in medicine or nature."

Although illegal in a handful of states, kratom is widely available online and in health stores, where it is sold as dried or crushed leaves, powder, capsules, tablets, liquids and gum. Users tout kratom's pain relieving benefits, and say it also reduces stress, depression and cravings for other drugs.  Recent policies that discourage the prescribing of opioid pain medication have increased interest in kratom as an alternative treatment.

Ash is a recovering opioid addict who uses kratom as a deterrent.

"I have no cravings for narcotics. No part of me ever desires to put narcotics back into my body because of kratom. There is no need because it works so well and it eliminates cravings," said Ash, who used the addiction treatment drug Suboxone for about a year while in recovery.

"I went off of Suboxone using kratom. There is no way I would ever put myself back on Suboxone. But where do I go for help with pain now?" she asked.

Ash first had an inkling that the federal government was preparing to take broader action against kratom when the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention issued a report last month claiming that kratom was "an emerging public health threat." The CDC cited kratom-related calls to U.S. poison control centers, which jumped from 26 calls in 2010 to 263 in 2015.

"I'm sorry, but I don't consider 263 calls to poison control an emerging public health threat. I don't think anyone does," said Ash. 

Few Kratom Studies

Although kratom has been used medically for hundreds of years, few studies have been done on its safety or to see how it actually works.

“Mitragyna speciose (kratom) has a psychostimulant effect like coca and a depressive effect like opium and cannabis, which seem to be contradictory. It is also reported that it is weaker than morphine, has a milder withdrawal syndrome compared to opioids, and is less harmful than cocaine,” is how one study explained it.

The Food and Drug Administration has been trying unsuccessfully to stop the importation and sale of kratom.  Last year the FDA issued an import alert that allows the agency to seize kratom supplements without even physically examining them.

Earlier this month, FDA agents seized more than 100 cases of products labeled as kratom in Grover Beach, California. The products are distributed by Nature Therapeutics Inc. under the name Kratom Therapy.  The FDA said the company was illegally selling kratom products as drugs to treat various medical conditions.

“The FDA will continue to take aggressive enforcement action to safeguard the public from harmful drug products illegally marketed as treatments for which they have not been studied or approved,” said Melinda Plaisier, the FDA’s associate commissioner for regulatory affairs.

The DEA says the ban on kratom chemicals would take effect at the end of September. Earlier this month, the agency also said it would not change the classification of marijuana as a Schedule I controlled substance.

Chronic Pain Patients Discovering Alternative to Opioids

By Pat Anson, Editor

It comes with clever names like KChill, Liquid K, Green Sumatra and Green Joy.

An advocacy organization calls it “a natural botanical that’s improving health and wellness from coast to coast.”

The Food and Drug Administration calls it a “narcotic” that can cause aggression, hallucinations, delusions, and tremors.

What are they talking about and why such radically different views?

Kratom is an herbal medicine made from the leaves of the Mitragyna speciose tree that grows in southeast Asia. People in that part of the world have used kratom for centuries as a natural remedy to boost energy, relieve stress and treat addiction. In the United States, kratom is increasingly being used as a pain reliever – a “safer” option than opioid pain medication.

For people with chronic pain who want complementary therapy or want to avoid the organ damage mainstream medications can cause, it's a great option,” said Suze Blood, a 43-year old Maine woman who suffers from rheumatoid arthritis, degenerative disc disease and fibromyalgia.

On the advice of a friend, Blood started using kratom three years ago as an alternative to opioid pain medication, which not only didn’t help her pain, but made her tired and depressed.

“My friend brought me some powdered kratom to try, and he mentioned how beneficial it had been for him and his brother in managing alcohol dependence. I also learned it helps with opioid withdrawals. A smaller amount will offer more energetic response, and larger (doses) more sedative qualities and lasts for hours,” said Blood.

Traditionally, kratom leaves were simply ground up to make tea or sometimes even smoked, but the leaves are now being used commercially to make a wide variety of tinctures, ointments, capsules and energy drinks.  Like marijuana, different strains of kratom do different things, and the internet is awash with testimonials about their benefits.

Red vein kratom helps people relax and has “an excellent ability to reduce pain,” according to the Kratom Trading Company, while white vein Kratom is used as a stimulant “to promote alertness, mental vigilance and wakefulness,” according to Kratom Online.  

Kratom is not classified as a controlled substance by the Drug Enforcement Administration, but is considered a dietary supplement regulated by the FDA. Supplements in the U.S. are held to far less regulatory standards than medications, but that hasn’t stopped a handful of states from making kratom illegal or the federal government from trying to get it off the market.

In January, FDA agents in Illinois confiscated nearly 90,000 bottles of a dietary supplement made with kratom called RelaKzpro, using a provision in the law that allows the agency to detain a supplement if it believes the product is adulterated or misbranded.  

Even though kratom has been used for hundreds of years, the FDA considers it a "new dietary supplement” for which there is inadequate information about its safety.

The FDA even issued an import alert last year that allows the agency to seize kratom supplements without even physically examining them.

These heavy-handed tactics haven’t stopped kratom products from becoming widely available online without a prescription. They are also sold in some health and convenience stores – where they are often discreetly kept hidden behind the counter.

Few studies have been done on the efficacy or safety of kratom. The leaves contain mitragynine and 7-hydroxymitragynine, alkaline compounds that are believed to reduce pain by activating natural opioid receptors in the brain. Researchers have trouble explaining exactly how kratom works without comparing it to other drugs, most of them illegal.

“Mitragyna speciose has a psychostimulant effect like coca and a depressive effect like opium and cannabis, which seem to be contradictory. It is also reported that it is weaker than morphine, has a milder withdrawal syndrome compared to opioids, and is less harmful than cocaine,” is how one study explained it.

An increasing number of pain patients – unable to get opioids or tired of their side-effects – are trying kratom.

“I used to need 1-3 Percocet a day, and now i take ZERO and feel better and have a clear mind,” is how one of our readers put it.

Others have learned kratom is not only useful for pain relief, but reduces their cravings for drugs and alcohol.

“People are so scared of the opioid epidemic right now, which I completely understand, I’m a recovering opioid addict myself,” says Susan Ash, who was diagnosed with late-stage Lyme disease in 2010. She took opioid pain medication for several years, wound up going to rehab, and now takes kratom capsules for pain relief.

“It does activate these opiate receptors, so it is very effective on pain,” says Ash, who founded the American Kratom Association. “The beauty of this plant is that it’s not something someone like me, who struggles with opioid addiction, craves. It’s not something that I take when I don’t need it. It’s not something that ever in my life made me feel impaired. And I’ve been taking this for several years.”

Ash says most members of her association use kratom for pain, depression or anxiety.

“Our numbers increased a lot when hydrocodone scheduling went into place. We got a lot of older women who sought us out, whose doctors cut them off,” said Ash, referring to the DEA’s rescheduling of hydrocodone in October 2014, which made the painkiller harder to obtain. She says the CDC’s new opioid prescribing guidelines are having a similar effect.

“As those restrictions are put in place and more doctors are scared and unwilling to prescribe opioids, the more people we get. There’s definitely a direct correlation,” Ash told Pain News Network.

Kratom is illegal in Vermont, Indiana, Tennessee, Arkansas and Wisconsin. Several other states are weighing similar legislation, including New York.

If past experience is any indicator, outlawing kratom is a whole lot easier than actually controlling it.

Thailand criminalized kratom in 1943 when its popularity interfered with the opium trade, which was then a major source of revenue for the Thai government. Over 70 years later, kratom use is still rampant in much of the country.