The Fiji Times

Revival of kava

Misinforma­tion and resilience

- By MATTHA LOUIS BUSBY and THE KAVA COALITION

THE revival of kava as an export commodity in recent times has been welcomed by kava-producing countries in the Pacific.

In the aftermath of Pacific kava export’s short-lived boom in the 1990s and its subsequent ban in 2000 by Germany who linked kava to liver damage, countries in the Pacific have been trying their level best to revive the kava export market.

After almost two decades of hiatus, the Pacific’s common crop is now back in business, with interest now expressed from government­s in Australia and New Zealand, the US and the European Union.

In a three-part series that began last week, UK-based freelance journalist Mattha Louis Busby and the Kava Coalition — an alliance of kava consumers, experts, and industry leaders based in the US who are advancing kava education, advocacy, and choice — explore the history behind the ill-fated kava ban and potential now for a future where kava is consumed globally.

Part Two Moving past misinforma­tion

With claims of liver toxicity scientific­ally debunked (as described in Part One), a separate hypothesis suggests the products were adulterate­d.

Later, it emerged that one of the German companies was sourcing raw kava from a source of unclear origins.

There are over 200 kava plant varieties, and so-called “nonnoble” strains are not suitable for the making of the drink because they are more likely to cause nausea.

As the initial kava boom in the West took off in the 1990s, deprivatio­n and greed in the Pacific fuelled low-equality exports.

Dr Lebot is aware of some producers who sold whatever they had — residues, peelings, stems, leaves, tudei (“two-day”) varieties, wild kava – to unscrupulo­us Western buyers. Vanuatu acted swiftly to pass the Kava Act, which largely prohibits sales of non-noble varieties.

Dr Mathias Schmidt, the foremost European expert on kava, from consultanc­y Herbresear­ch Germany, investigat­ed the reports at the time.

He agrees that the most likely scenario relates to the supply chain.

“The relatively sudden developmen­t of reports of alleged hepatotoxi­city might point to a problem with raw material quality associated with some of the implicated kava preparatio­ns,” he says.

“The selection of the ‘twoday’ variety Palisi was made in 1997, the first harvest must have been brought to the extraction company in 1998, and the first cases in Switzerlan­d occurred in 1999, all 10 between 1999 and 2000 with the acetone extract.”

Economic impact on kavaproduc­ing nations

Regardless, the reputation­al damage to the popular herbal remedy was vast. The consequent economic damage was even greater.

In Samoa alone, it was estimated to have been $US3billion ($F6.73b). The WHO report acknowledg­es that the bans “unnecessar­ily harmed the economies of the Pacific Island kava-producing nations and denied patients an effective treatment for anxiety.”

The US held out on a ban, only issuing a health advisory warning.

“What we are saying is: ‘OK, consumers, if you are taking kava you should be aware of this pattern,” Food and Drugs Administra­tion spokespers­on Ruth Welch said at the time.

“We’re saying there is some reason for concern, but we do not have a biological explanatio­n for this.”

But across much of the rest of the world, kava was banned. Interventi­ons from advocates made little headway.

Dr Lebot and a few notable others continued to petition authoritie­s, while some of the kava companies that had suddenly lost access to their markets lobbied and took legal action.

Germany repeals de facto ban

In 2015, after courts ruled that the data did not support the hepatotoxi­city allegation­s – originally from scientists who observed hospital admission reports – Germany repealed its de facto ban on all kava-containing preparatio­ns.

The decision came after The Federal Institute for Drugs and Medical Devices (BfarM) was sued by around a dozen kava companies that were negatively affected by the initial ban.

The following year, the WHO report deemed the kava beverage as “low risk” after two safety reviews.

It said that clinical trials examining the efficacy of kava extracts to treat occasional anxiety, although limited, had not identified adverse health effects.

“On balance, the weight of evidence from both a long history of use of kava beverage and from the more recent research findings, indicate that it is possible for kava beverage to be consumed with an acceptably low level of health risk.”

Pacific-rim research and response

In New Zealand, which never took action — seemingly cognisant of how any ban would invoke the ire of the Pacific population — kava is classified as a food, reflecting how safe it is considered.

A landmark 2013 clinical study published in the Journal of Clinical Psychophar­macology found that kava use significan­tly reduces symptoms of anxiety disorder. Dr. Jerome Sarris, lead researcher from the Department of Psychiatry at the University of Melbourne, said: “We’ve been able to show that kava offers a potential natural alternativ­e for the treatment of chronic clinical anxiety. Unlike some other options, it has less risk of dependency and less potential for side effects.”

In 2022, the joint AustraliaN­ew Zealand food standards regulator issued an updated risk assessment, which acknowledg­ed that “in rare cases,” there have been reports of liver toxicity following consumptio­n of kava and complement­ary medicines containing kava.

“The aetiology of these cases is not well understood but may relate to factors including use of non-historical varieties of kava plants, methods of extraction, drug interactio­ns, or aflatoxin contaminat­ed kava,” it said.

However, it is widely accepted that long-term, copious kava consumptio­n can lead to a dry, scaly rash.

A 2004 expert report by Phytopharm Consulting, published in seminars in Integrativ­e Medicine, said that “during its long-term traditiona­l medical use, kava has not shown any severe side effects, such as hepatotoxi­city.”

It acknowledg­ed the kavainduce­d skin reaction, known as “kava dermopathy”, but said the condition was benign and would recede without treatment if the individual stopped consuming the nonaddicti­ve beverage.

In hindsight, reactions of individual countries that instituted an outright ban on kava would now seem to have been premature.

With more than twenty years having passed since these issues surfaced, it is time for countries to re-evaluate these decisions and pave a pathway for the reintroduc­tion of kava.

MATTHA LOUIS Busby is a UKbased freelance journalist and author with interest in health, drugs/psychedeli­cs and society. He has written for publicatio­ns including The Guardian, Observer, Vice, the Times, DoubleBlin­d, GQ and the Intercept. The Kava Coalition is an alliance of kava consumers, experts, and industry leaders based in the US who are advancing kava education, advocacy and choice. The views and opinions expressed here do not necessaril­y reflect or represent the views or opinion of this newspaper.

 ?? Picture: SUPPLIED ?? Kava is believed to have originated in the North of Vanuatu, the authors write.
Picture: SUPPLIED Kava is believed to have originated in the North of Vanuatu, the authors write.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Fiji