Home / Health / Georgia Battles Surge of Dangerous Synthetic Opioids Sold as 'Natural' Products
Georgia Battles Surge of Dangerous Synthetic Opioids Sold as 'Natural' Products
15 Nov
Summary
- Synthetic opioid-like substance '7-OH' flooding gas stations, vape shops, and convenience stores
- 7-OH poses severe health risks like seizures, addiction, and overdose
- New Georgia laws to restrict sale of kratom and tianeptine products by 2025

As of November 15, 2025, Georgia's Attorney General Chris Carr has issued a stark warning about the growing threat of a synthetic opioid-like substance called '7-OH'. This chemical compound, formally known as 7-hydroxymitragynine, is derived from the kratom plant but becomes significantly more potent and dangerous when isolated or concentrated.
Carr reports that 7-OH products are flooding gas stations, vape shops, and convenience stores across the state, often falsely marketed as natural kratom. These products pose severe health risks, including seizures, substance abuse disorder, withdrawal, overdose, and even death. Carr says the state is "staring down the next wave of the opioid crisis" and must take action before it's too late.

