Hochul signs bills banning kratom sales to under-21s
ALBANY — Kratom; it’s sold at gas stations, convenience stores and the ever-growing number of smoke shops across New York state, often marketed as a natural herbal supplement. But those products could be extremely dangerous, and state officials have taken their first step at reeling in the kratom industry.
The substance is processed from the leaves of a plant native to southeast Asia, and has grown in popularity over the past two decades, dating back to the 1990s deregulation of the supplements industry. Originally, it was sold in select stores in its primary form, a dark green powder, but over the years its been put into all sorts of products, from beverages to candies and small pouches similar to dip tobacco.
Kratom’s effects are wide ranging and not entirely understood; it’s marketed as a solution for insomnia, diarrhea, opioid withdrawal, pain and depression among other issues. Inside the body, kratom binds to the same receptors as morphine according to state Health Commissioner Dr. James McDonald.
“It is really addictive,” he said. “I think it’s important to say that the pharmacology of this is well known, kratom isn’t just one drug. It’s dozens of psychoactive substances.”
Kratom contains a substance called 7-hydroxymitragynine, 7-OH, which is more active on opioid receptors than morphine. The FDA warns people against taking this unregulated substance, but lacks the authority under current law to ban it without lab-proven evidence that it’s harmful.
But there is other evidence suggesting kratom can be deadly. Governor Kathy Hochul said on Monday that 100 deaths across New York have been attributed to kratom, including Nick Scribner, a resident of Saratoga County. Nick died of aspiration; he breathed in his own vomit after taking kratom and falling asleep last November.
Since then, the Scribner family have been working to spread awareness of the harms of kratom; they’ve picketed outside stores selling kratom products, they’ve gone to public town and county meetings to talk about the substance and its risks, and they lobbied for a bill signed on Monday that bans the substance from being sold to people under 21.
“It has been my honor, and my pleasure, to work with these folks here,” Cari Scribner, mother of Nick, said on Monday, standing alongside the legislative sponsors of the bill and the Governor. “I feel Nick’s presence with us, and I feel there will be fewer Nicks, people who succumb to this drug.”
Under the laws signed into place by Hochul on Monday, products that contain the substance cannot be sold to people under age 21. Kratom-containing products will also have to show a clear warning label, informing customers that the item includes kratom and that it is addictive. Both laws will go into effect fully on Dec. 22 of next year, giving manufacturers and store owners a chance to prepare.
