Operation Whole Health
Operation Whole Health · Readiness & Informed-Consent Standard

Prep & Preparedness — Caregiver Track

For the spouse, parent, or battle-buddy walking this road beside a veteran — through any of these treatments
Document: Full Course · DRAFT v0.1
Status: pre-clinician-review — not for use until physician-signed
⚑ Draft for review. Modules marked Clinician sign-off must be signed by a named licensed physician before any family sees them.
This applies no matter which medicine your loved one is doing. What you'll learn is the universal core of supporting someone through any of these treatments — ibogaine, MDMA, ketamine, psilocybin, LSD, cannabis, or kratom. Their specific medicine's risks and what to watch for are in the companion Modality Education Library.

The 8 modules

  1. You Are the Second Patient
  2. Understanding What They're Facing
  3. The Risks You Personally Need to Know
  4. Supporting the Preparation
  5. During Treatment — Your Role
  6. Integration & Post-Care
  7. Crisis Recognition & Response
  8. Caring for the Caregiver
Module C1

You Are the Second Patient

By the end you'll understand: your role, why it matters, and that your wellbeing counts too.

Almost every guide to this kind of treatment is written for the person taking the medicine. Almost none are written for you — the wife, husband, mom, dad, or battle-buddy who holds everything together. That ends here. You are the second patient, and this track is for you.

Why your role matters more than anyone tells you

You are the steady presence before, the calm eyes during, and — most importantly — the person who's still there in the hard weeks after, when the clinic isn't. You'll often be the first to notice if something's wrong, and the biggest factor in whether the gains last. That's not pressure — it's honor. But it's real work.

What you're signing up for — honestly

This can be emotionally heavy. You may watch someone you love go through something intense. You'll juggle logistics, hold hope without pushing, and manage your own fear. Knowing that upfront lets you prepare instead of being blindsided.

Your wellbeing is not optional. You cannot pour from an empty cup — the last module is entirely about caring for you, and it's not an afterthought.

How to use this alongside their course

Your veteran has a 12-module Patient Track. You don't need to complete theirs, but skimming it helps you understand what they're learning. Walk it together where you can — shared understanding is its own kind of support.

They served their country. You're serving them. That's its own kind of duty, and it deserves its own preparation.
Module C2

Understanding What They're Facing

By the end you'll understand: the treatment in plain language, so you can be a calm anchor instead of an anxious bystander.

You don't need a medical degree — you need enough understanding to stay steady and know what's normal.

The medicines, simply

Ibogaine, psilocybin, ketamine, and MDMA are powerful compounds that, in a supervised setting, can temporarily change how the brain processes emotion and memory and appear to open a window where the brain can rewire itself more easily12. In veterans specifically, early results have been striking — for example, a Stanford study of 30 Special Operations veterans reported large improvements in PTSD, depression, and anxiety1 — while still being early, open-label research1.

What it may look like from the outside

Especially with ibogaine, the experience can last many hours and look intense: your loved one may be very still, emotional, nauseated, or seem "far away." Much of what looks dramatic is a normal part of the process in a monitored setting.

Normal vs. concerning

Emotional release, vivid inner experiences, and physical discomfort are often expected. Chest pain, fainting, a racing/irregular heartbeat, or a seizure are not normal — those are emergencies (covered in C3 and C7).

Your steadiness is contagious. If you understand what's happening, you can be the calm in their storm.
Module C3

The Risks You Personally Need to Know Clinician sign-off Established

By the end you'll understand: the medical and psychological risks you may be the first to spot — and that your job is to observe and escalate, not to treat.
What to watch for depends on the medicine. Below uses ibogaine's cardiac danger as the sharpest example. If your loved one is doing MDMA (overheating, confusion), ketamine (urinary problems, over-use), or cannabis/psilocybin (paranoia, disordered thinking), see the Modality Education Library for their specific warning signs.

You are extra eyes and ears. Knowing the real dangers means you can speak up fast — sometimes faster than the person going through it can.

The heart is the big one

Ibogaine can disturb the heart's rhythm (it prolongs the QT interval and can trigger a fatal arrhythmia), and this risk can linger for days because its active byproduct stays in the body2,4. Watch for fainting, a racing or irregular heartbeat, chest pain, or severe dizziness — during and in the days after. These are call-the-team-or-911 signs.

Medications matter — flag everything

Some common medications (including certain SSRIs) can dangerously increase ibogaine's levels or add heart-rhythm risk5. If you know of any medication, supplement, or substance your loved one takes — make sure the clinical team knows, even if it's awkward. People sometimes hide things; your honesty here can be lifesaving.

Do not let embarrassment win. If your veteran is reluctant to disclose a medication or substance, gently insist — or tell the team yourself. A hidden detail is a hidden danger.

Psychological red flags

Afterward, watch for a lasting sense of disconnection from reality, overwhelming distress that isn't settling, or any talk of self-harm. Take these seriously and reach out immediately (see C7).

Your lane: observe and escalate. You are not expected to diagnose or treat — you're expected to notice and to get the professionals involved fast.
Medical warning signs are clinical content — this module is signed by a licensed physician and aligns to the clinic's specific protocol.
You don't have to be a doctor. You have to be the one who says "something's wrong" out loud, in time.
Module C4

Supporting the Preparation

By the end you'll understand: the practical ways to help them prepare well — without taking over or adding pressure.

Help with the medical readiness

Getting screened (ECG, labs, medication review) can feel like a hassle to someone who just wants to feel better. You can be the one who keeps those appointments on track and reminds them why the screening protects them.

Support the basics

Sleep, steady routines, and lower stress in the weeks before all help. You can protect these quietly — a calmer home, earlier nights, fewer stressors where you can manage them.

Handle the logistics

Support without pressure

This is delicate. Encourage, don't push. Don't oversell a miracle, and don't project your own hopes onto their experience. Your job is to make it easier for them to walk their path — not to walk it for them.

The best support is often invisible: the ride handled, the night quiet, the pressure off. Load-bearing, not spotlight.
Module C5

During Treatment — Your Role

By the end you'll understand: how to show up on and around treatment day — and how to hold yourself together while you do.

Be a calm, non-interfering anchor

If you're present, your job is reassuring presence — not directing the experience. Follow the clinical team's lead. A gentle voice or a held hand, if welcomed, can mean everything; trying to "manage" the experience does not.

Watch, and communicate with the team

You're another set of eyes. If you notice something concerning, tell the staff — clearly and immediately — and let them act. Never override the clinical team, and never intervene medically yourself.

Agree on signals beforehand

Talk in advance about how they'll let you (or the team) know if they need comfort, space, or help. Knowing the plan calms everyone.

Take care of yourself in the waiting

Watching someone you love go through something intense is hard. Bring water, food, something to occupy long stretches, and someone you can text. Your steadiness runs on your own basic care.

Presence over performance. You don't have to do anything heroic — you have to be there, and be steady.
Module C6

Integration & Post-Care — The Weeks After Plausible

By the end you'll understand: how to support lasting change — and how to manage your own hopes through it.

This is where you matter most, and where the clinic is usually already gone. The dosing day gets the attention; the weeks after are where change either takes root or fades.

The open window

These treatments appear to open a period of heightened brain plasticity — a stretch when new patterns form more easily12. What surrounds your loved one in that window matters: calm, connection, good sleep, and new routines help it take; chaos, isolation, and old ruts work against it.

How to help

Manage your own hopes

You may want a "new person" overnight. Real change is usually quieter and slower than that. Loving them through the ordinary, uneven pace of recovery is part of the work — and relationships sometimes shift as someone heals. Give it grace and space.

The medicine opens the door. You help hold it open — one calm, ordinary day at a time.
Module C7

Crisis Recognition & Response Clinician sign-off

By the end you'll understand: exactly what to do if something goes wrong — physically or emotionally — without freezing.

Hope for calm; prepare for the worst. A little planning now means you'll act instead of panic.

A simple rule of thumb

Keep these where you can grab them fast: 911 · Veterans Crisis Line 988 → press 1 (text 838255) · your treatment team's emergency number: ____________.

Stay calm under pressure

Your calm helps them. Breathe, speak steadily, and give responders clear facts: what happened, when, and what your loved one has taken (this is where your medication awareness from C3 pays off).

Emergency guidance is clinical — this module is signed by a licensed physician and must match the clinic's specific emergency protocol before use.
Courage isn't the absence of fear. It's making the call anyway. You've got this.
Module C8

Caring for the Caregiver

By the end you'll understand: how to sustain yourself so you don't burn out — because you matter too.

We started by saying you're the second patient. We end there on purpose. If you run yourself into the ground, you can't be the anchor they need — and you deserve care in your own right, not just as a means to their healing.

Know the signs of caregiver fatigue

Exhaustion that rest doesn't fix, irritability, resentment, anxiety, losing yourself in their needs, neglecting your own health — these are signals, not failures. Notice them early.

Boundaries aren't betrayal

You can love someone fully and still protect your own limits. Sleep, time for yourself, saying "I need a break" — these keep you in the fight for the long haul.

You have your own support

And if you are the one in crisis (you don't have to be a veteran to call): Veterans Crisis Line 988 → press 1, or the 988 Suicide & Crisis Lifeline. Your life matters too.
You've been carrying them. Let someone carry you, too. That's not weakness — that's how you last.

Operation Whole Health — Patriot-founded 501(c)(3). Prep & Preparedness — Caregiver Track, DRAFT v0.1. Not for use until each gated module is signed by a named licensed physician.

Disclosures & limits: Educational only; not medical advice, not a treatment protocol, and not an endorsement of ibogaine or any Schedule I substance. Ibogaine is not FDA-approved and carries serious, sometimes fatal risks; all care must be directed by qualified treating clinicians. OWH develops nutritional/detox protocols and products (conflict of interest disclosed); this program is designed to support — never replace — a clinic's own care and consent. Human evidence retrieved from PubMed; see references.

Crisis: dial 988, then press 1 · VA Caregiver Support Line: 1-855-260-3274.

References

Sources

  1. Cherian KN, et al. Magnesium–ibogaine therapy in veterans with TBI. Nature Medicine, 2024. DOI
  2. Alper K, et al. hERG Blockade by Iboga Alkaloids. Cardiovascular Toxicology, 2016. DOI
  3. Litjens RPW, Brunt TM. How toxic is ibogaine? Clinical Toxicology, 2016. DOI
  4. Brunt TM. Ibogaine and cardiovascular complications. Addiction, 2026. DOI
  5. Glue P, et al. Influence of CYP2D6 activity on ibogaine PK/PD. J Clinical Pharmacology, 2015. DOI
  6. Dolenec P, et al. Psychoplastogens: neuroplasticity via BDNF-TrkB-mTOR. Pharmaceuticals, 2026. DOI

Full reference set (12 sources) appears in the white paper and Patient Track. Caregiver-specific citations shown above.