@jordy_jor: Take us out to the soccer match . #nycfc @Alicha

Jordan Emanuel
Jordan Emanuel
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Sunday 03 November 2024 00:46:09 GMT
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Right now, there’s a little-known drug — one that researchers say is far more addictive than morphine — that’s fueling what could be the nation’s next opioid crisis. Most shocking of all, a large amount of it runs through Kansas City. 7-hydroxymitragynine, better known as 7-OH, is an opioid born from kratom with a high potential for addiction. Vince Sanders, president and founder of locally based CBD American Shaman, is at the forefront of the 7‑OH surge, a phenomenon that a growing number of people are comparing to the early days of the opioid epidemic. American Shaman was among the earliest, if not the first, to market 7‑OH, selling it since early 2024 through its Advanced Alkaloids line in retail shops alongside CBD and other cannabis products. Sanders owns a sister company, Shaman Botanicals, that makes the products at a facility in Riverside, where he relocated earlier this year after Kansas City shut down his operation on Southwest Boulevard. Two recently filed class-action lawsuits accuse Sanders’ companies of misleading consumers about 7-OH and other products. One says Sanders “formulated 7-OH to be extremely physically and psychologically addictive” — a claim made more credible by rapidly growing online forums like r/quitting7oh, a subreddit where users share experiences of intense dependency and strategies for quitting. Federal regulators have also taken notice. This summer the Food and Drug Administration sent Shaman Botanicals a warning letter, saying the ingredient cannot legally be added to dietary supplements or foods, and warned that consumers were being exposed to “unproven, potentially dangerous products.” But Sanders is brushing all that off, saying he does not expect to shut down production of 7-OH. Read the first part of our three-part investigation into 7-OH at the KansasCity.com. 🎥: David Hudnall/The Star (@davidhudnall)
Right now, there’s a little-known drug — one that researchers say is far more addictive than morphine — that’s fueling what could be the nation’s next opioid crisis. Most shocking of all, a large amount of it runs through Kansas City. 7-hydroxymitragynine, better known as 7-OH, is an opioid born from kratom with a high potential for addiction. Vince Sanders, president and founder of locally based CBD American Shaman, is at the forefront of the 7‑OH surge, a phenomenon that a growing number of people are comparing to the early days of the opioid epidemic. American Shaman was among the earliest, if not the first, to market 7‑OH, selling it since early 2024 through its Advanced Alkaloids line in retail shops alongside CBD and other cannabis products. Sanders owns a sister company, Shaman Botanicals, that makes the products at a facility in Riverside, where he relocated earlier this year after Kansas City shut down his operation on Southwest Boulevard. Two recently filed class-action lawsuits accuse Sanders’ companies of misleading consumers about 7-OH and other products. One says Sanders “formulated 7-OH to be extremely physically and psychologically addictive” — a claim made more credible by rapidly growing online forums like r/quitting7oh, a subreddit where users share experiences of intense dependency and strategies for quitting. Federal regulators have also taken notice. This summer the Food and Drug Administration sent Shaman Botanicals a warning letter, saying the ingredient cannot legally be added to dietary supplements or foods, and warned that consumers were being exposed to “unproven, potentially dangerous products.” But Sanders is brushing all that off, saying he does not expect to shut down production of 7-OH. Read the first part of our three-part investigation into 7-OH at the KansasCity.com. 🎥: David Hudnall/The Star (@davidhudnall)

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