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Medical Examiner 3-3-23

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MEDICALEXAMINER FREE T AKE-HO ME COP Y!

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HEALTH • MEDICINE • WELLNESS • HEALTH • MEDICINE • WELLNESS • HEALTH • MEDICINE • WELLNESS • HEALTH • MEDICINE • WELLNESS • HEALTH • MEDICINE • WELLNESS • HEALTH • MEDICINE • WELLNESS • HEALTH • MEDICINE • WELLNESS • HEALTH • MEDICINE • WELLNESS • HEALTH • MEDICINE • WELLNESS

MARCH 3, 2023

AIKEN-AUGUSTA’S MOST SALUBRIOUS NEWSPAPER • FOUNDED IN 2006

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IT IS IMPOSSIBLE TO

OVERSLEEP

A lethal dose of fentanyl next to a penny for perspective.

THE FENTANYL BLAME GAME by Bad Billy Laveau

Matthew is a solid family man. Computer expert for our national defense for many years. Security clearances. Stationed in various countries. He has seen and heard things you and I can only imagine. But he is not perfect. Sometimes he drank too much at night. He controlled it. He functioned. Never missed work. Never failed to perform. He was self-controlled. I trust Matthew. Matthew and I saw a family on TV whose 15-year-old son bought a pill online. The pill, supposedly Percocet, was delivered to the family’s front yard. The kid took the pill. Parents were oblivious. A fentanyl overdose ripped his soul from his body. The parents wept on national TV while announcing a non-profit to “stop cartels from killing American kids.” Our hearts wept for their loss. But not once did they accept any blame for their son buying and taking an illegal, non-physician-prescribed drug. Physicians have a quarter century of training and education before they prescribe a

Now there’s a statement that could keep you awake at night. Impossible? Really? The assertion was made by Harvard University professor of neurology Elizabeth Klerman in a recent discussion about sleep. It certainly has its logic. She said, “Unlike chocolate cake you can eat when you’re not hungry, there’s no evidence you can sleep when you’re not tired.” When you put it that way... If we had the chance to interview professor Klerman she might add a few caveats. She’s most likely talking about a healthy person who isn’t taking medications or ingesting any stupor-inducing substances. Those could be scenarios where a person sleeps all day and still wants more. Despite the prevalence of sickness and drugs with a whole list of side effects, we are not as a rule people troubled by too much sleep. The actual problem is exactly the opposite: too little. And in the same way that July 4 is peak season for people blowing their fingers off, March of every year is

peak season for sleep problems. Why March? Two words: spring, and forward. This year it happens on March 12, with an immediate loss of of a full hour of sleep for some 330 million Americans (or at least the adult segment of that number). As Crash Course points out (see page 10), the National Institutes of Health says most adults aren’t even getting 7 hours of sleep per night. That means one hour represents 15%of our nightly slumbers. That is a significant loss for a population that, as a group, is already sleep deprived. Medically speaking, a single night of inadequate sleep is all it takes to have an impact the next day (and perhaps the next few to follow), and for millions of people, the start of Daylight Saving is all the proof they need. What are those impacts? It’s a surprisingly long list, and it underscores the tremendously important role sleep plays in living a salubrious life.

Please see FENTANYL page 4

Please see SLEEP page 3

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