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Marta Lynch

Crossroads Treatment Center, Rosarito, Mexico.

1 paper in the library · 60 citations · publishing 2017

Papers

Subjective effectiveness of ibogaine treatment for problematic opioid consumption: Short- and long-term outcomes and current psychological functioning.

Journal of psychedelic studies November 1, 2017 Alan K Davis, Joseph P Barsuglia, Austin-Marley Windham-Herman et al. 60 citations

A survey of 88 patients who received ibogaine treatment in Mexico between 2012 and 2015 found that most (80%) reported the drug eliminated or drastically reduced withdrawal symptoms, and half said it reduced opioid craving, with some reporting that reduction lasting at least three months. Thirty percent never used opioids again after treatment, and over half of those abstainers had been abstinent for at least one year. Although 70% relapsed, 48% decreased use from pretreatment levels and an additional 11% eventually achieved abstinence. Treatment responders had lower rates of depressive and anxious symptoms and higher well-being. The results suggest ibogaine is associated with reductions in opioid use and improved psychological outcomes.