‘Kratom Saved My Life’

Many people use kratom as an alternative to Suboxone. Suboxone is a medication that is normally used to treat opioid use disorder, but make many feel very sick.

In a 2016 PNN survey of over 6,100 kratom users, nearly ten percent said they used kratom primarily as a treatment for opioid addiction. Most said it was very effective (91%) in easing their withdrawal symptoms and worked better than Suboxone, with fewer side effects.

“Kratom saved my life. I tried every other type of treatment for drug addiction over the past 10 years. Subutex, methadone, total abstinence and the 12 step program. Each time I failed. After 2 years of Suboxone, I stopped treatment and began using kratom,” one respondent told us.

“Because of kratom, I no longer have to worry about heroin (or methadone or Suboxone) making me sick. I’ve been clean for 2 years. I can hold a job now, and I only use it when I need pain relief or need to relax,” another respondent wrote.

“I became hooked on oxycodone and had to take Suboxone to get off it. The problem is Suboxone withdrawals were nearly as bad, so I used kratom to cure that,” another patient said.

“Kratom truly saved my life. I’ve always suffered from extreme anxiety, but it has decreased drastically since taking it. Withdrawals from opiates and Suboxone are awful. I would not have been able to get clean without kratom. I’m confident in saying that if you make kratom illegal, the number of overdoses will rise,” wrote another kratom user.

The DEA and FDA have tried to make kratom illegal by having it declared a Schedule I controlled substance. So far, those efforts have failed due to a public backlash.

Kratom is sold legally in most U.S. states, but a handful of states and cities have banned it over concerns about addiction and overdoses.  About 100 deaths nationwide have been linked to kratom use, but in the vast majority of cases other drugs and illicit substances were involved.

About two million Americans use kratom, primarily to treat chronic pain. A 2020 study funded by the National Institute on Drug Abuse concluded that kratom is an effective treatment for pain, helps users reduce their use of opioids, and has a low risk of adverse effects.

Although many people use kratom to self-treat opioid addiction and ease withdrawal symptoms, the FDA won’t allow kratom vendors to advertise or promote kratom for addiction treatment or any other medical purpose. This month, the FDA sent a warning letter to the Sunshine Trading Company in Colorado, warning it to stop promoting its kratom products for “opiate withdrawal.”

“You market kratom products for the treatment or cure of opioid addiction and withdrawal symptoms. However, these products have not been determined by FDA to be safe and effective for these (or any other) uses. Further, the unproven treatments could cause patients to forego or delay FDA-approved treatments for opioid addiction or withdrawal,” the FDA said.

In recent years, several other kratom vendors have received similar warning letters from the agency.

PAIN NEWS NETWORK