Ohio weighs kratom legality as DeWine calls for ban

Calls to ban sales of kratom and its derivatives in Ohio are growing louder as the state weighs how to handle the increasingly popular drug — or supplement, depending on who you ask.

Why it matters: Ohio does not currently have laws regulating kratom or its usage, meaning local shops can sell kratom and its derivatives over the counter.

Driving the news: Last week, Gov. Mike DeWine announced he would call on the Ohio Board of Pharmacy to designate all natural and synthetic forms of kratom as illegal drugs.

  • The board scheduled a special meeting two days later to discuss the topic, but quickly canceled it without comment.

How it works: Kratom, or mitragyna speciosa, is a tropical tree native to Southeast Asia.

  • Its leaves are processed into a powder, which can be smoked or added to products like pills, gummies or drinks.
  • The substance has been marketed as a mood booster, pain reliever or method of weaning off of opioid addiction, similar to buprenorphine.

Threat level: Processing kratom creates traces of the chemical 7-hydroxymitragynine, or 7-OH, which can be “more potent than morphine” in high doses.

  • Natural kratom leaf products contain just trace amounts of 7-OH, but experts warn that more potent and concentrated products could be addictive and dangerous.

What they’re saying: DeWine says kratom products are “an imminent public health risk.”

  • “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.”

The other side: Mac Haddow, senior public policy fellow for the American Kratom Association, agrees with DeWine — but only regarding concentrates.

  • The AKA supports states scheduling concentrates and synthetics as illegal drugs, but wants them separated from the natural product, which it calls a “safe herbal supplement.”
  • “Our battle, starting in 2019, has been trying to block these highly concentrated and semi- or fully synthesized products from the marketplace.”

Zoom in: Spokespeople for Mayor Andrew Ginther and Columbus Public Health declined to comment.

  • Pharmacy board representatives did not return calls requesting comment.

The big picture: The FDA is cracking down on kratom at the federal level, focusing on scheduling 7-OH (not the herbal supplement kratom) as a controlled substance…

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