What Exactly Is Ibogaine, and How Successful Is It for the Treatment of Opiate Addiction?

Question by Connie D: What exactly is Ibogaine, and how successful is it for the treatment of opiate addiction?
I was told of a new medication to help overcome an opiate addiction, unfortunately I haven’t been able to find out much about it. I believe that it is only available at a treatment facility located in New Mexico…so, it really makes me wonder if it’s even a legitimate treatment approved by the FDA. I also wonder if there have been many studies done on it, and what the statistics are concerning its rate of success.

Best answer:

Answer by D.D.
It is illegal in the usa, classified as a type 1 substance , since the 1967 when it was used as a psychedelic.
It is used successfully to break drug ,heroin, opiate ,etc addictions but not used in the usa.
It is used in canada,and Mexico, but not new mexico.
If you do a simple search on yahoo search bar , Ibogaine , a lot comes up

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22 Responses to What Exactly Is Ibogaine, and How Successful Is It for the Treatment of Opiate Addiction?

  • raysny says:

    What it is:
    http://www.erowid.org/chemicals/ibogaine/ibogaine.shtml
    http://www.ibogaine.desk.nl/index.html

    Treatment:
    http://www.addictionsearch.com/treatment_articles/article/ibogaine-detox-and-treatment_11.html
    http://ibogaine.desk.nl/clin-perspectives.html

    Ibogaine treatment is not available in the United States despite showing promising results.
    “Proponents of ibogaine treatment for drug addiction have established formal and informal clinics or self-help groups in Canada, Mexico, the Caribbean, Costa Rica, the Czech Republic, France, Slovenia, the Netherlands, Brazil, South Africa, the United Kingdom and New Zealand, where ibogaine is administered as an experimental compound.”
    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ibogaine

  • thewikidjuggalo420 says:

    Im so glad my mom took me away from my drug addict father & abusive drug/alcoholic family. I was with them for a few years of my life & during that time I was sexually abused & learned bad behavior. My dad came in & out whenever. I always wondered where he was & I asked my mom all the time if? my dad loved me because I diddnt know. Now most of my family still uses and more sexual abuse has happened and the family is just really fucked up. Ive struggled so much from all of it.

  • TheZeroCrossing says:

    I agree this is an issue. One can’t asume anything is safe. I find it profound how much alcohol has affected my life. I am so angry that I have been? so rejected by so many adults and family. I would love to beleave there’s hope. But there are still cracks that we fall through. Thanks to your addiction. Thanks for being so selfish look around at the society You created

  • nelrish24 says:

    oh? my gosh!

  • kamronandRobyn says:

    I guess there is? proof that just because both your parent make bad choices does not mean the children have to. I have never and will never have a drug or alcohol addiction. Coming from the environment where I was ” raised ” if you could say that….it’s a big shocker. I mostly raised myself and trained myself to never have those kind of issues in my life.

  • forestskog says:

    Detestable is a bit strong. But having governments laws? (and presumably government officials) literally forcing women to have vaginal implants is a bit far from our constitution

  • susan987654 says:

    Why bother screening people who want to adopt? Sex offenders and drug addicts have the right to have kids ,too right? Do you call the local meth house when you need a babysitter? If not, why? If you wouldn’t leave your kid with a drug addict for a few hours, how can you condemn someone else’s kid to that environment for their entire life? We have a moral obligation to protect kids that outweighs any obligation to safeguard the “rights” of drug addicts, felons, alcoholics,? etc…

  • susan987654 says:

    What a silly comparison. Legally, a 16 year old girl is too young to consent to sex, but, if she’s pregnant, she has full responsibility for the resulting unwanted child.? So we don’t even allow her to decide whether or not to have sex, but we DO allow her to make all the decisions for a helpless infant. We enforce strict standards on adoptions because we understand the importance of a stable home environment, so why is the idea of enforcing standards for parenthood so detestable?

  • forestskog says:

    Go to Iran. They have a system that works along the lines you seem to like. Women are told never to drink and never to have sex before marriage. If they disobey, they are literally dragged out so a soccer field by the authorities, buried up to their waist, and then stoned? to death a mob of hysterical screaming bearded mullahs. Thanks I still prefer the west. No implants for me or mine

  • disguisingdeath says:

    I was? high once and gave my 2 year old a puff on my crack pipe, is this bad? will it harm it.

  • ExtremeRehab says:

    @ axlfoleyfanatic Please? 4give me 4 not replying sooner, just read ur post. Utube will not let me post links, pls go 2 google & type in alanon meetings, then navigate 2 find meetings in your area&online. I encourage everyone 2 go 2 alanon/alateen meetings, knowing that complete anonymity is given & received. The love, kindness, compassion & tools u find in these rooms will fill ur soul with the much needed love & hope that addition has robbed from us all. All the best 2U, please keep in touch.

  • Rangersbabes01 says:

    my mum was an alcoholic ever since? i was 2

  • ostapslobodian says:

    My dad? became a cocaine addict when I was 6.

  • lisababy85 says:

    Thank you, I am an adult child of an alcoholic it’s AMAZING HOW MUCH IT can? make a child suffer. I have a friend that critizes the choices I have made in the past and I am just now realizing there was a reason for it.

  • lisababy85 says:

    that’s? true!

  • givebirthathome says:

    My husband was an ACOA, who thought he could do just fine without therapy, and apparently? was doing OK…until we had our child.

  • givebirthathome says:

    Well, don’t worry about not drinking alcoholic beverages, that will? do you good! What you really want to be careful about is *not having children* until you are sure you have sorted out traumas you may have from your mother in your own childhood. If you don’t, having your own children will re-awaken them when you may not have the resources to be able to sort them out. As one of my neighbors said, “Having children is like the most powerful acid you have ever taken in your life”.

  • Tom R says:

    To anyone interested in healing, I come from 2 alcoholic parents who are both deceased for many years now. I am reading a book by Dr Laura called
    ” Bad Childhood — Good Life ” and it has really helped me to understand alot.
    Please dont wait as long as I have to start seeking help. Please start today. I have wasted so much of my life being depressed over this. Its? time to move on. The past is the past. So anyone young, please get answers today ok. God Bless.

  • rosaryfilms says:

    -? you are welcome!

  • Lysebaby620 says:

    Allright here we go… my mother is an alcoholic and I believe she takes speed, her mother was an alcoholic and was a hard core drug abuser, (so was her brother) , her mother was an alcoholic, and so was her mother. So while I understand? its not something that can be predictied, I am 19yrs old and deathly scared to have any alcoholic beverages and have never touched one. My heart goes out to all of you. I can only imagine the long term affects cuz I already know what the short ones are!

  • axlfoleyfanatic says:

    Do you know any websites of forums I could go on. I am Australian and I am not really the type of person who? can just be out there and just tell me story straight off ,but in time I would be able to.

  • axlfoleyfanatic says:

    I feel for you! I am not in the same situation as you, I mean? I understand more than you would think.But I’m not in the same situation,close.
    axlfoleyfanatic.

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