Practitioner name
Interests: Ayahuasca, Chronic Pain, Cooking, Dance, Depression, Listening to Music, Meditation, Microdosing, Optimization, Psilocybin, PTSD, Reading, Traveling
4
Total Leads
46
Leads Remaining
Benefits
Listings
Info
Subscription
Messages
Reports
Aeden Smith-Ahearn
Bio :
My name is Aeden Smith-Ahearn and I am the founder of Experience Ibogaine. I am an ex addict not an entrapanuer, my goal is to provide the safest treatments at the most affordable price without cutting corners. I have employed thirteen doctors and work with many more as colleagues. Our head doctor is Dr. Paul Casillas, he has close to 15 years treating patients with ibogaine and has been with us since day one. We are the longest running Ibogaine facility in Baja California (the world's ibogaine clinic hot spot). We have provided medically assisted treatments in a clinical setting for over ten years now, having treated several thousand patients, more than any one aside from maybe Clear Sky or Dr. Martin Polanco. We also incorporate 5meo-DMT into our therapy sessions. We work primarily with addiction and more specifically opiates but also other drugs. As of recent more and more people are coming down for PTSD assistance, mainly veterans. We have worked on studies with faculty from the University of Alabama, and a Harvard graduate working at Mass General. Safety is what we pride ourselves on. We have a deep knowledge of this medicine inside and out, it is a very effective tool especially with addiction. That being said it's far from a cure which it seams a lot of people think based on what they have read on the internet. The problem I've noticed as big money enters the field, is that so does dishonest marketing techniques, used to sway the hopes of the hopeless. Now we have seen an uptick in patients with unreasonable expectations from this medicine based off of misinformation sold on the internet. It makes our jobs increasingly difficult, and more and more people are disappointed with their outcomes. This is changing our practice as much as the addition of fentanyl into the market did, which effected safety and efficacy. It's a tough battle we are fighting here, but that doesn't stop me. I've been in contact with the Govonor of Colorado and several other states representatives to discuss the dangers of decriminalizing ibogaine specifically (not the safe ones like mushrooms). Ibogaine requires a lot of in depth training and procedural qualification to administer, along with medications, knowledge and medical equipment. Already there has been one death from it in Colorado. It is really important to realize the danger of this substance since without a change in federal scheduling, it will be impossible to safely administer this drug in a legal medical setting. The more people that die as a result of this is more ammo for the federal government to keep it schedule one. Any how I have a lot to say on all of this, but not enough people to listen. At least not the people that matter.