Detoxing A Nation of Addicts
Why Prescription Meds are Killing People – And How an African Herbal Medicine is Breaking the Cycle of Addiction to Drugs
(Press release from St. Michael’s Hospital, Dec 7, 2009)
Deaths from opioid use in Ontario have doubled – from 13.7 deaths per million residents in 1991, to 27.2 deaths per million residents in 2004 – according to a new study led by physicians at St. Michael’s Hospital and the Institute for Clinical Evaluative Sciences (ICES) in Toronto.
Researchers also found that the addition of a long-acting form of oxycodone (OxyContin) to the province’s drug formulary in January 2000 corresponded with a five-fold increase in oxycodone-related deaths.
“Many doctors are aware that prescription opioids can have fatal side effects by depressing breathing and decreasing levels of consciousness,” explains lead author Dr. Irfan Dhalla, a physician at St. Michael’s Hospital. “But we suspect most will be surprised to learn just how many deaths occur each year in Ontario from prescription opioids.”
Opioids, also known as narcotic pain relievers, are among the most commonly prescribed medications in Canada. They are used to treat people with moderate-to-severe acute or chronic pain.
The researchers manually reviewed nearly 7,100 files at the Office of the Chief Coroner for Ontario. They then linked these files with provincial data on physician visits and medication prescribing. They also analyzed data from IMS Health Canada – an organization that tracks the sales of prescription drugs.
Here are the researchers’ key findings:
• Prescriptions for oxycodone rose by more than 850 per cent during the study period. This increase was much larger than for any other opioid. Oxycodone accounted for about one-third of the almost 7.2 million prescriptions for opioids dispensed in Ontario in 2006.
• The increase in deaths was especially pronounced after OxyContin was added to the provincial drug benefit plan in 2000. Over the next five years, deaths related to any opioid increased by 41 per cent, and the number of deaths related to oxycodone (the active ingredient in OxyContin) rose fivefold.
• Deaths from prescription opioids in Ontario far outnumbered those from heroin.
• Most opioid-related fatalities (54 per cent) were accidental. The manner of death was undetermined in 22 per cent of cases and deemed to be suicide in 24 per cent.
• Most people whose deaths involved an opioid had visited a doctor and received a prescription for the drug in the month before they died.
“These findings highlight the tremendous societal burden of opioid-related morbidity and mortality” says the study’s co-author Dr. David Juurlink, a senior scientist at the Institute for Clinical Evaluative Sciences (ICES) and a staff physician at Sunnybrook Health Sciences Centre in Toronto. “Patients and doctors may not fully appreciate the potential danger of these drugs, particularly when they are taken in combination with other sedating drugs or alcohol.”
Based on the study findings for Ontario, the estimated annual national incidence of opioid-related deaths in 2004 (27.2 deaths per million population) came somewhere between the incidence of death from HIV infection (12 deaths per million) and the incidence of death from sepsis, or severe infection (40 deaths per million).”
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In response to the report from St. Michael’s Hospital, health activist Mike Adams had this to say:
“It’s the dirty little secret of the pharmaceutical industry: More people are killed by prescription opioids than all those killed by heroin and cocaine combined. Prescription drug abuse is now more common than street drug abuse – by far! And yet Big Pharma rakes in huge profits from all the patient addictions to their opioids. And by “opioids”, what I mean is narcotics. They are, in fact, one and the same. So of all the drug addicts in North America today, you can divide them into two camps:
1) People addicted to street drugs.
2) People addicted to prescription drugs.
The people in group #1 (street drugs) are taken to jail where they are given prison sentences. People in group #2 (prescription drugs) are taken to their doctor where they are given prescription refills. It’s all really the same narcotics, it’s just that one group is legal and the other is illegal.
And what really determines whether a particular narcotic is legal or illegal? Whether or not Big Pharma profits from it. If Big Pharma makes money off the narcotics, they’re considered legal.
Big Pharma, you see, earns tens of billions of dollars each year from drug addicts. And just by coincidence, it turns out that their prescription narcotics are extremely addicting, guaranteeing repeat business. The business model is so dang lucrative, you might think they were drug dealers...
Why do you think the main sponsors for the Partnership For A Drug-Free America are the drug companies themselves? It’s because Big Pharma is trying to eliminate the competition. By keeping up the so-called “War on Drugs” front, the pharmaceutical industry can make sure it dominates the market for narcotics. After all, if you’re going to feed narcotics to a nation full of junkies, why not make a hefty profit on it? That’s the thinking of drug companies, it seems, as they have done basically zilch to effectively stem the abuse of their own prescription narcotics.” (www.naturalnews.com)
African Herb Helps Addicts Get Off the Drug Treadmill
by Julia Woodford
For the hundreds of thousands of people addicted to both legal and illegal narcotics, the future is grim. Those trying to free themselves from addiction typically face great physical and psychological pain within hours of discontinuing the drug. While there are support groups for addicts trying to kick their habit, symptoms of withdrawal can be so overwhelming that attempts to discontinue the drug often end in failure. What’s worse – once the doctor’s prescription for legal narcotic painkillers runs out, patients will often turn to the black market for their pain pills, and when that runs dry the next step is heroin. (In fact, the street slang for OxyContin is “hillbilly heroin”.) And the spiral downward from there is truly horrific.
But there is new excitement spreading through the recovery movement, thanks to a West African herb called Tabernanthe Iboga. Used for thousands of years in African folklore medicine for various purposes including spiritual development and as a rite of passage into adulthood, Iboga’s effectiveness as a treatment to stop opiate withdrawal symptoms was unknown until the late 1960’s. Since then, studies by leading research and academic facilities have shown that Ibogaine (isolated active ingredient from the root bark of the Iboga plant) is an effective addiction interruptor for most substances, including heroin, methadone, methamphetamine, cocaine, alcohol, nicotine – and prescription narcotics.
To date, scientists do not fully understand how ibogaine works in the body, but the theory is that: “Ibogaine alleviates physical withdrawal symptoms of opiate detox by attaching to the body’s opiate receptor sites. It functions in a similar way to treatments that block or take residence in these receptor sites. However, unlike methadone or suboxin which can lead to chemical dependency, Ibogaine is non-addictive and need not be taken on a continuing basis. Ibogaine treats other chemical dependencies by cleansing the body of the drug and resetting the brain’s neuro-chemistry.
After ingestion, Ibogaine is converted by the liver into Nor-ibogaine, which stores up in the fat cells of the body, and is released slowly, preventing any further withdrawal symptoms or cravings for two to six months. It has a documented anti-depressant effect that establishes a state of well-being, free from negative thought patterns.”
Ibogaine Treatment Centres Give Addicts a New Lease on Life
I recently had the opportunity to visit an Ibogaine clinic called ‘Awakening in the Dream House’ in San Pancho, Mexico. While I was there, I met some remarkable people, most of whom were addicts in recovery from a variety of powerful drugs – from opiates to methamphetamine to alcohol. As each person told their story of recovery, I grew more and more intrigued by the power of this herb to break the cycle of addiction and restore wellbeing. Not only does Iboga detoxify drug residues from the physical body, it also increases serotonin levels in the brain and has significant psycho-spiritual benefits.
“Ibogaine can provide individuals with critical insights into the origins of their addiction process or other unhealthy behavior patterns. This is experienced acutely during the first hours of the session when the conscious and unconscious aspects of the mind are merged. During this “awakened dream” state, past events, even those about which the individual is not conscious, may be experienced in an emotionally detached way. Many individuals have suddenly understood or clarified past traumatic events or situations that, in part, have led to their present life condition. In effect, years of therapy can be replicated in a matter of hours.” (www.awakeninginthedream.com)
The Ibogaine clinic in San Pancho, which was founded in 2003 by Rocky Caravelli after he used Iboga to kick his addiction to heroin and methamphetamine, is staffed by ex-addicts and health professionals who work closely with each new client to support them on their journey of recovery. Included in the treatment protocol are a variety of vitamins such as potassium and magnesium to support the body during the gruelling detoxification process, along with amino acids such as GABA and Glutamine to nourish the nervous system and calm the mind.
This remarkable clinic is one of a network of facilities being set up around the world (except for the U.S. where Ibogaine is illegal) to introduce Iboga as a critical component in the alternative treatment of drug addiction. While at the San Pancho clinic, I was interested to meet Clare Wilkins, a visiting director of another Ibogaine clinic located in Tijuana, Mexico. Known as Pangea Biomedics, the Tijuana clinic consists of five MDs, an acupuncturist, massage therapist, chronic pain specialist, and a naturopath. Nutritional medicine is high on the agenda here, as evidenced by Clare’s encyclopedic knowledge of herbs and vitamins that assist in the recovery process.
“We teach our clients how to prepare healthy meals and how to use supplements and herbs to curb anxiety, strengthen their nervous system, and promote relaxation,” she says. “For many of our clients this is the first time in their life that they are learning how to nourish themselves properly. Once the Iboga has broken their addiction, the next step is to rebuild their body and mind with nutritional medicine. It is this extra step that can increase the chances of a lifelong recovery from addiction since many people became addicts in the first place because they were trying to fill a void in themselves. Now they are learning how to fill that void in healthy ways.”
While this unorthodox approach to breaking addiction is not successful 100% of the time, estimates from the various clinics range between 60% and 80% in terms of the number of people who successfully use Iboga to get off drugs permanently. The difference between success and failure seems to depend on whether the client is committed to the treatment, really ready to quit, and willing to do the hard work of breaking their mental attachment to the drug as well.
Local Resources
Photo: Ibogaine facilitator Matt Zielinski, along with Holistic Nutritionist Michelle Waithe, run the Toronto Ibogaine Centre which caters to addicts in recovery from both street and prescription drugs
Canadians interested in this protocol for curing addiction will be pleased to learn that there is an Ibogaine clinic right here on our doorstep. Known as the Toronto Ibogaine Centre, this facility was founded by Matt Zielinski who recovered from heroin and methadone addiction using the Iboga plant. The Toronto Ibogaine Centre is currently located in Haliburton, Ontario, amid vistas of verdant forests and tranquil scenery. Clients stay in a luxurious room equipped with a cozy fireplace and a private bathroom.
Zielinksi has been working with Ibogaine since 2005 and has intimate knowledge of the plant and the recovery process. His protocol for administering the Ibogaine is based on personal experiences and professional collaboration with other providers. His ability to coach and counsel people throughout the treatment regime stems from personal experience with addiction and many years of exploration into the Bwiti* culture with a focus on the traditional and modern use of the Iboga plant.
(*The Bwiti is a West Central African tribe which uses Iboga as a central part of their religious ceremonies to induce spiritual enlightenment and to solve problems of a spiritual/medical nature.)
Also on staff is Michelle Waithe, a Registered Holistic Nutritionist and an expert in the field of holistic wellness. Her extensive knowledge of nutrition and supplements is used as an adjunct to the Iboga therapy. During their stay, clients follow a vegetarian whole food diet that provides the necessary nutrients to help further their recovery process and regain their health and vitality. Clients feast on freshly squeezed juices, delicious smoothies, and a combination of raw and cooked whole foods. Patients leave the treatment with a new outlook on life and a greater appreciation for a holistic lifestyle.
Having experienced the psychospiritual benefits of the Iboga plant myself, I found it to be a valuable tool in the journey to self discovery, and believe it has a great deal to offer westerners seeking healing in both body and mind. Mind you, it’s no walk in the park. This plant initiated the most intensive mental and physical purge that I have ever experienced.
(Note: Ibogaine facilitators require all participants to submit a doctor’s report on their blood work and a recent EKG before commencing any treatment protocol.)
Resources:
Awakening in the Dream House, San Pancho, Mexico, www.awakeninginthedream.com, email: maryditton@mac.com
Pangea Biomedics, Tijuana, Mexico, www.ibogaine-therapy.net Phone: 011-52-664-609-4338
Toronto Ibogaine Centre, www.torontoibogainecentre.ca, Telephone: 416-432-8779, email: matt@torontoibogainecentre.ca
Iboga Therapy House, a treatment facility located near Vancouver, BC www.ibogatherapyhouse.net
