JEFFERSON CITY, Mo. (WGEM) - Families everywhere are setting the table for a Thanksgiving feast this week, but over 900,000 Missouri families are leaving a space for a loved one who struggles with substance abuse.
The holidays are for fun and family-time, but it's no secret they're also stressful. Dr. Luke Buffaloe, a family medicine physician with MU Health Care, said he sees more people fighting their substance abuse disorder this time of year.
Hundreds of thousands of Missourians seek help for opioid abuse, according to the Department of Health and Senior Services, but a rising trend doctors like Dr. Buffaloe are seeing is Missourians struggling with addiction to kratom or 7-OH.
"It has some stimulant effects similar to caffeine does, but the reason we get concerned about it is it also has some opioid-like effects, similar to what we see with heroin and fentanyl," Dr. Buffaloe said.
Kratom is unregulated in Missouri, and readily available at smoke shops around the state. There are no FDA approved kratom products, and some states have started to regulate or ban them.
Missouri Attorney General Catherine Hanaway is investigating six retailers for allegedly selling harmful kratom substances, possibly enhanced to make the opioid-like effects stronger. The retailers she's looking into are all based in St. Louis or Kansas City.
"We are deeply concerned that Missourians are being sold drug-like substances under the guise of harmless supplements, with no FDA approval, no safety testing, and in some cases no meaningful disclosure of what these products actually contain," Hanaway said.
The retailers being investigated are:
The attorney general's office expects an update in the investigation as soon as next month.
If you or a loved one needs help with substance abuse, you'll find resources by calling (573) 751-4942.