At a glance — ibogaine treatment for Detroit residents, June 2026 update:
- Federal status: Schedule I; no Michigan clinic can administer ibogaine
- Michigan policy: HB 6020 would fund FDA clinical trials with $50M from the opioid settlement fund — in committee as of June 2026, not enacted
- Detroit: 599 opioid overdose deaths among city residents in 2023; 352 in 2024 (41% decrease)
- Wayne County: highest overdose death rate in Michigan in 2023 (54.4 per 100,000)
- Statewide: Michigan recorded 2,960 provisional drug overdose deaths in 2024 (CDC NCHS)
- Allowed treatment pathway: Brazil, ANVISA-approved, hospital-administered
- Travel from Detroit: DTW → GRU/GIG via Atlanta or New York
Ibogaine is a single-session medical intervention for opioid dependence, substance abuse, prescription medications, behavioral addictions, and trauma, prescribed and administered by independent licensed Brazilian physicians in a hospital setting. For Detroit residents, the available pathway runs through Brazil — Nekawa is the wellness academy that supports students through it.
Detroit recorded 599 opioid overdose deaths among city residents in 2023, according to Michigan Department of Health and Human Services vital statistics. In 2024, that figure fell to 352 — a 41% decrease, though local health officials caution Detroit remains at the center of the state's opioid crisis. Wayne County carried Michigan's highest overdose death rate in 2023 at 54.4 per 100,000 residents. Fentanyl was involved in 74% of Michigan overdose deaths that year, and Black residents were 2.8 times more likely to die of overdose than white residents. These are not abstractions. They are people from Midtown, Corktown, Southwest Detroit, Mexicantown, Palmer Park, and every other corner of the city.
Within roughly 25 miles of central Detroit, SAMHSA's treatment locator lists approximately 95 facilities offering substance-use, detox, residential, buprenorphine, or methadone services. For many families who land on this page, those programs have already been tried. Detox at Henry Ford or the Detroit Medical Center, residential programs, MAT, IOP, sober living — the cycle continues. The question that brings people here is whether something is structurally different, or just another variation of the same approach.
This page covers:
- What ibogaine is and how the medical session actually works
- Why the available medical pathway runs through Brazil rather than the United States
- How Nekawa's wellness program is structured around the work the prescribing physicians do
- What the trip from Detroit to Paraty involves, from hub connections to on-site integration
Nekawa is a wellness education academy. It is not a clinic, and it does not prescribe or administer ibogaine. The medical work happens in a hospital under independent licensed Brazilian physicians; Nekawa builds the preparation, environment, and integration around it.
Why Detroit residents are looking outside the US for ibogaine
Ibogaine is a Schedule I controlled substance in the United States. No clinic, hospital, or physician in Michigan can legally prescribe or administer it. That policy gap is not closing soon, even as Lansing has begun to engage the question.
In May 2026, Representatives Jaime Greene and Mike McFall introduced House Bill 6020, which would create an ibogaine clinical-trial grant program within the Michigan Department of Health and Human Services, funded with $50 million from the Michigan Opioid Healing and Recovery Fund. Sponsor statements emphasize FDA-overseen trials and veteran mental health. As of June 2026, the bill remains in committee. It has not been enacted.
That legislation matters. It does not help someone in active addiction today. For Detroit families who have exhausted local options — the kind of family that has already cycled through programs at Henry Ford, Corewell Health, or across the river in Windsor — the physician-prescribed pathway runs through Brazil.
Detroit's overdose history makes the stakes concrete. The city recorded 599 opioid overdose deaths in 2023. Even after a 41% decline to 352 in 2024, Wayne County remains Michigan's hardest-hit county by rate. Fentanyl-contaminated cocaine and counterfeit pills drive polysubstance deaths. Racial disparities persist: Black residents bear a disproportionate share of the toll. The crisis is not abstract in this city.
What ibogaine actually does
If your loved one is in active addiction, you have probably heard a lot of clinical language that did not translate into results. Ibogaine is worth understanding differently, because it works differently.
Ibogaine is a naturally occurring compound derived from the root bark of the iboga plant. It acts on multiple receptor systems simultaneously, including opioid receptors, NMDA receptors, and serotonin pathways. The result, for many patients, is a dramatic reduction in acute opioid withdrawal symptoms and a reset of the neurological patterns that drive compulsive use. The full receptor-level mechanism is covered in detail on our ibogaine overview.
What makes ibogaine different from medication-assisted treatment goes beyond pharmacology. It is the window that opens after. In the weeks following a session, the brain enters a period of elevated neuroplasticity, sometimes called the Window of Wonder, that typically lasts 2 to 12 weeks. This is not a passive recovery period. It is the window that Nekawa's 15-day on-site integration and 45-day at-home coursework are specifically built around, because what a student does during that window shapes what the session becomes long-term.
Ibogaine is not appropriate for everyone. The peer-reviewed research is serious and growing, and so is the understanding of who is and is not a candidate. Cardiac history, current medications, and other health factors all matter. That is precisely why the physician-prescribed pathway requires a full medical workup before any session proceeds.
The medical protocol: what hospital administration actually means
The ibogaine session at the heart of Nekawa's program is prescribed and administered by independent licensed Brazilian physicians, not by Nekawa. Understanding what that means in practice matters, because it is the difference between a supervised medical procedure and an unmonitored retreat experience.
Before the prescribing physicians clear a patient for ibogaine, the workup includes:
- EKG
- QT-interval check
- Comprehensive blood panel
- Liver function test
- Magnesium loading
The QT-interval check is the critical cardiac screen. Ibogaine affects cardiac conduction, and a prolonged QT interval is a contraindication. This is not a formality. It is the reason the medical workup exists.
During the session, an on-site physician is present throughout. The hospital's ICU-trained nursing team monitors continuous cardiac telemetry for a minimum of 24 hours post-dose. The session itself moves through distinct phases: the intense visionary phase lasts 6 to 12 hours, followed by roughly 12 hours of quieter mental processing, then 24 to 48 hours of physical recuperation.
Nekawa's role is not clinical. We build the preparation, the environment, and the integration structure around the medical team's work. The full program structure is:
- 10 days of preparation and on-site medical onboarding before the session
- The ibogaine session, administered by the medical team in a hospital setting with continuous cardiac telemetry
- 15 days of structured integration on the property
- 45 days of at-home integration coursework after returning home
Longer on-site programs of up to 90 days are available for students who want deeper transformation work. The 28-day structure is the foundation; the extended program builds on it.
See our cardiac safety overview for the full QT-interval, EKG, and screening protocol the prescribing physicians follow.
Why Brazil and not somewhere else
Mexico and Costa Rica have become common destinations for ibogaine, and some of the programs there are run by serious people. But the regulatory framework is not the same, and that difference matters when you are talking about a compound that requires continuous cardiac monitoring.
In Brazil, ibogaine is approved for medical use under ANVISA, Brazil's federal health agency, the equivalent of the FDA. Treatment is prescribed by licensed physicians and delivered within hospital infrastructure that includes emergency response capability. This is not a private villa. It is not a retreat center operating in a gray area. The current US and global legal status of ibogaine makes clear why the structure of the Brazilian system is distinct.
Nekawa is a wellness education academy, structured around the hospital infrastructure that physician-administered ibogaine treatment requires. We do not run the medical protocol. The prescribing physicians do. What we provide is the preparation curriculum, the environment, the integration coursework, and the program structure that gives the medical session its full context.
The distinction matters for Detroit students specifically. Michigan lawmakers are proposing $50 million in ibogaine trial funding through HB 6020 precisely because the evidence base is credible — and Detroit's fentanyl-driven toll is part of why that conversation exists. The Americans for Ibogaine state legislation tracker lists Michigan among the states actively moving on ibogaine research. That credibility is built on the kind of physician-prescribed, hospital-administered framework Brazil has operated under for years.
| Brazil (Nekawa pathway) | Michigan rehabs | Mexico clinics | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Is ibogaine available? | Yes — physician-prescribed | No (Schedule I) | Yes — but unregulated |
| Regulatory framework | ANVISA-regulated | FDA + DEA (federally illegal — no ibogaine pathway) | No formal framework |
| Cardiac monitoring | 24-hour ICU telemetry, EKG, QT screening | N/A (no ibogaine) | Varies |
| Program length | 28+ days | 30 days typical | 5–10 days typical |
| Setting | Hospital partner + wellness program | Treatment facility | Retreat / private clinic |
| Aftercare structure | 45-day online/home coursework with mentors | Outpatient varies | Rare |
| Cost / insurance | $750/day; insurance N/A | $300–$2,000/day; insurance available | $1,000–$1,800/day; insurance N/A |
Traveling from Detroit to Paraty
Detroit Metropolitan Wayne County (DTW) connects to São Paulo–Guarulhos (GRU) or Rio de Janeiro–Galeão (GIG) via one-stop service through Atlanta or New York. Total travel time typically runs 14 to 18 hours door to door, depending on connection length.
From either GRU or GIG, it is a 4-hour drive along the BR-101 coastal highway to Paraty, on Brazil's Costa Verde coast. We arrange private ground transport from the airport, so students arrive directly without navigating Brazilian transit or making connections.
What you arrive to is not a medical facility. Our location sits in the Atlantic rainforest, the Mata Atlântica, at the edge of the sea. Old-growth jungle. Waterfalls. A protected lagoon. A bay scattered with more than 300 forested islands. The colonial port town of Paraty is just outside. The environment is part of the program. The preparation and integration work we walk students through is designed to use the setting intentionally.
As of January 1, 2026, US travelers need an approved Brazilian eVisa to enter Brazil. Apply online at brazil.vfsevisa.com.
- Cost: US$80.90
- Processing time: about 72 hours
- Validity: 10 years, multiple entries of up to 90 days per stay
- Passport: US passport with at least 6 months of remaining validity
Our intake team walks every student through this during onboarding.
Michigan's legal and policy posture on ibogaine
Michigan is joining the growing list of states where ibogaine research has reached the legislature — but research bills are not treatment access.
House Bill 6020, introduced in May 2026 by Representatives Greene and McFall, would direct $50 million from the Michigan Opioid Healing and Recovery Fund into FDA-overseen ibogaine clinical trials. The bipartisan framing emphasizes opioid use disorder, PTSD, traumatic brain injury, and veteran mental health. As of June 2026, the bill is in committee and has not been signed into law.
At the federal level, the April 2026 Executive Order directed coordinated ibogaine research with a focus on veterans — relevant in a state with a substantial military and veteran population. It does not change ibogaine's Schedule I status or create a regulated treatment pathway inside the United States.
For a Detroit resident in active addiction in 2026, the practical reality is unchanged: no Michigan provider can prescribe or administer ibogaine, and HB 6020 does not offer enrollment as a treatment option while it remains pending. Michigan recorded 2,960 provisional drug overdose deaths in 2024 per CDC NCHS data — progress from prior years, but still a statewide crisis that Detroit's numbers reflect at the city level.
The Americans for Ibogaine legislative tracker is the right place to follow Michigan's status as the bill moves through committee.
What integration looks like when you return to Detroit
The ibogaine session is not the end of the program. It is closer to the beginning of the part that requires the most work.
The 45 days of at-home integration coursework that follow the on-site program are structured around the Window of Wonder, the 2 to 12 weeks of elevated neuroplasticity that follow the session. This is when the brain is most receptive to new patterns, and it is when the coursework is designed to be used. Students returning to Detroit — to a condo in Midtown, a house in Corktown, or a quiet street in Palmer Park — return to the same environment where the patterns formed. The at-home coursework is built with that reality in mind, including the social networks, economic stress, and neighborhood triggers that make recovery in this city its own challenge.
Michigan's naloxone distribution expansion and fentanyl test strip programs have contributed to declining overdose deaths statewide. Integration is the complement on the other side of a medical session: structured reflection, specific practices, and ongoing engagement with the material from the preparation phase. Our team remains in contact with students through this period. The work continues.
For students with opioid dependence specifically, the opioid program page covers how the full curriculum is structured for that context. Students navigating burnout, depression, or anxiety alongside addiction may find the burnout and mental health program relevant as well.
How to start: the discovery call
The first step is a discovery call. This is a candidacy and program-fit conversation, not a sales call. We are looking at whether Nekawa's program is genuinely right for you or your loved one, and whether you are ready to do what the program requires.
On the call, we cover the program structure, the preparation curriculum, what the on-site experience involves, and what the at-home integration period looks like. We also talk honestly about who the program is not right for. Clinical screening is conducted separately by the prescribing physicians. What we assess is program fit, commitment, and readiness.
If the program is a fit, we move to intake, onboarding, and scheduling. Our intake team handles visa guidance, ground transport coordination, and preparation coursework. You do not navigate this alone.
To start, visit Book a discovery call. If you are a Detroit family member trying to understand whether this is the right path, the discovery call is the right place to begin.
Where the jungle meets the sea
Nekawa sits in the Atlantic rainforest just outside the colonial port town of Paraty. Old-growth jungle, waterfalls, natural swimming pools, and a bay scattered with more than 300 forested islands. After Detroit, this is a different world.
Frequently asked questions
More questions? See our full FAQ.
Definitions
Plain-language definitions of the terms used on this page.
- Schedule I
- A US federal classification under the Controlled Substances Act for substances with no accepted medical use and high abuse potential. Ibogaine has been Schedule I since 1970, which means no clinic in the United States — public or private — can administer it.
- ANVISA
- Brazil's federal health agency, the Agência Nacional de Vigilância Sanitária — the functional equivalent of the US FDA. Regulates physician-prescribed, hospital-administered ibogaine treatment in Brazil under formal medical-use authorization.
- Window of Wonder
- The 2- to 12-week period of elevated neuroplasticity following an ibogaine session, during which the brain is more receptive to new patterns and integration work. Nekawa's 15-day on-site integration plus 45-day at-home coursework are structured around this window.
- eVisa (Brazilian)
- An electronic visa required for US travelers entering Brazil since January 1, 2026. Applied at brazil.vfsevisa.com, costs US$80.90, processes in roughly 72 hours, valid 10 years with multiple entries up to 90 days per stay.
- QT-interval
- A measurement on an electrocardiogram (EKG) of the time between ventricular depolarization and repolarization. Ibogaine prolongs the QT interval, which is why the prescribing physicians screen every patient with EKG and a comprehensive workup before clearing them for a session.
- Hospital-administered
- Refers to ibogaine treatment delivered in a hospital setting under continuous cardiac telemetry, ICU-trained nursing, and an on-site physician throughout — the regulated framework Brazil's prescribing physicians operate within. Distinct from retreat-style settings in countries without a federal regulatory pathway.
Detroit's opioid overdose toll remains among the highest in Michigan even after a meaningful decline in 2024 — and fentanyl is still the driving force. If you are a Detroit family member who has watched someone cycle through local treatment programs without lasting change, the physician-prescribed pathway through Brazil is worth understanding seriously. Nekawa's discovery call is a direct conversation about whether this program is genuinely right for your situation. It is not a pitch. It is an honest assessment of fit, readiness, and what the 28-day program actually requires of a student. If you are ready for that conversation, start at Book a discovery call.
A medical program in a setting that matters
The hospital protocol is the foundation. The setting is the second medicine. See the property, the rooms, the team, and the route in.
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