Ohio Board Of Pharmacy Recommends Ban On Kratom

Ohio Board Of Pharmacy Recommends Ban On Kratom

https://www.prnewswire.com/news-releases/ohio-board-of-pharmacy-recommends-ban-on-kratom-300723130.html

WASHINGTON, Oct. 2, 2018 /PRNewswire/ — Dave Herman, Chairman of the American Kratom Association, strongly denounced the action by the State Board of Pharmacy on October 1, 2018 to commence the process to schedule kratom as a Schedule I controlled substance in Ohio.

“The findings of the Ohio Board of Pharmacy today parrot the false propaganda of the US Food and Drug Administration (FDA) in their crusade to ban kratom. The FDA attempted the same scheduling process in 2016, and that recommendation was rejected by the Drug Enforcement Administration (DEA) because the FDA data failed to meet the required standards for the scheduling of kratom at the federal level,” Herman stated.

“Since their failure in 2016, the FDA has launched a broad-based campaign to demonize this natural plant by consistently misstating the science and the actual pharmacologic activity of kratom,”

continued Herman. “The FDA has flooded state regulators, including the Ohio Board of Pharmacy with false claims and disinformation about the addiction profile and safety of this safe botanical plant.”

The FDA Commissioner, Scott Gottlieb, has repeatedly stated that kratom is an opioid, but credible scientists strongly dispute that statement showing that kratom’s pharmacologic activity is distinctly different than classic opioids where the respiratory system of the user shuts down and leads to overdoses that have created the opioid crisis that we are in today.

Commissioner Gottlieb also claims that there are 44 deaths associated with the use of kratom. Independent analysis of those claims have shown that the FDA conclusions are flat wrong and appeared to be deliberate manipulations of the data in order to convince the DEA and state regulatory agencies to enact bans on kratom because they simply do not have the scientific evidence that is statutorily required for such bans.

“The FDA has ignored credible science that clearly demonstrates that kratom has a very low potential for abuse and poses no risk to the public health for the citizens of Ohio or any other state,” Herman continued. “The AKA provided detailed reports and data to the Board of Pharmacy staff that show the scientific evidence, including new peer-reviewed and published research that shows conclusively that kratom has a very low addiction profile, and any deaths associated with kratom are from adulterated or contaminated kratom products, not the natural plant.”

There has never been a scheduling of any substance in the United States because it was adulterated with a toxic or dangerous chemical. The FDA has broad statutory authority to seize any adulterated product that poses a danger to the public, and they can provide the evidence to the Department of Justice to prosecute any individual or company who produces or distributes a dangerous adulterated kratom product.

The AKA is looking forward to working with the Ohio Board of Pharmacy to provide the compelling evidence that directly contradicts the conclusions found in their scheduling proposal for kratom. The nearly 5 million kratom consumers who safely consume kratom as a part of their health and well-being regimen should not have that freedom infringed upon by any regulation that is premised on bad science, inaccurate data provided by the FDA, and a deliberate attempt to manipulate the scheduling process by a federal agency.

ABOUT AKA

The American Kratom Association (AKA), a consumer-based non-profit organization, advocates to protect the freedom of consumers to safely consume natural kratom as a part of their personal health and well-being regimen.  AKA represents the nearly 5 million Americans who consume kratom safely each year. www.americankratom.org

2 Responses

  1. this is just getting so stupid! so what 44 people died (I wonder had other drugs in there system or had other health problems) how many people die due to allegic reactions from peanuts! What next! Do we outlaw peanuts so no one get hurts because someone does not check and ask about food they eat! If we outlaw every drug that is mood altering then we will have about 30% of medications including all that help the mentally ill will disappear. This is the problem when no one listens to science and reason and just want more power and way to control peoples money! I wonder how many big pharma companies doing studies right now to make a chemical Kratom that will end up costing 300 times more? This country has just gone insane with elected official who are not even bother with facts! I understand politcians are not expert but you would think they would look at both side with a open mind instead of opinions that belong no where near decisions like this! these people dont care about your health or anything else. If they did care they would not be voting to always defund healthcare! I am going guess this guy is a Republican also! What happening to personal responsibility. Most people never heard Kratom until people were basically dropped from the medication they needed to help with axienty and chronic pain and even depression! Now where do those people go no? The even more dangerous dealer in the street? Basically expect number to go up even higher as the State government then blame Kratom and opiates for the problem. kids very rarely are prescribed opiates and yet they are the largest group of abusers! the start of our kids getting into drugs does not start with opiate pills but those so called innocent alcoholic drinks kids get into as young at 8 to 10 years old!.

  2. “…classic opioids where the respiratory system of the user shuts down and leads to overdoses that have created the opioid crisis that we are in today.” Oh, puh-LEEZE.

    The american kratom org is not exactly an unbiased source. And the repeated uses of phrases like “this natural plant,” & “safe botanical plant” are trying to jump on the whole “if it’s ‘natural’ it must be safe” thing –this isn’t necessarily so (try grazing on some “natural” plain old potato greens –or don’t; they’re poisonous).

    I admit that scheduling the stuff seems very premature, as there’s not much actual evidence in either direction about its safety, efficacy, or pharmacology. But it seems that discourse these days is impossible without extremist assertions & blatant disregard for facts.

Leave a Reply

Discover more from PHARMACIST STEVE

Subscribe now to keep reading and get access to the full archive.

Continue reading