Feb 22

Being a major consumer of Ambien, sufferer of sleep apnea, and a worker with crappy insurance, I am more than well aware of how much money is being made on sleep disorders. This really validates what I have been complaining about, loudly, for some time now. Please read the entire article and start complaining yourself.

[Excerpt] The days following Heath Ledger’s death have swirled with speculation, with tales of hard drugs and prescription pills, of anti-depressants and sleeping tablets. Amid all the mutterings about heroin abuse and cocaine addiction, it is the sleeping pills that seem most startling. Ledger, plagued by the chronic insomnia that often accompanies depression, had apparently come to rely on medication to get him to sleep. “I warned him to stop,” said Jack Nicholson. “I tell people about Ambien [sleeping pill]. Somebody said, ‘Take this, it’s mild.’ I almost drove off a cliff 50 yards from my house.”

[Excerpt] In 2006 Forbes magazine ran an article about what it termed “the sleep racket”, the $20-billion industry that bloomed around our pursuit of the perfect night’s sleep: money spent on herbal balms, mattresses, sleep clinics and, oh yes, sleeping pills.

Full Story Here

Feb 22

Is this one of the things that can give you TMJ?

Sleep apnea might not sound so bad if you don’t have it.
Sleepless nights and drowsy days aren’t the worst of it, though.
Marked by extreme snoring broken by spells of gasping for breath, sleep apnea often bothers a bed partner as much as the patient.
Over the years, sleep apnea sufferers have complained that treatments are too uncomfortable and impractical to make them worth the trouble.
Now, a new device designed to stem snoring and sleepless nights caused by sleep apnea is getting rave reviews from local patients who say its near-instant relief is nothing short of a cure.

“I love it. It’s fantastic,” said Julie Cooper, 58, of Mountville, whose mild sleep apnea left her foggy during the day and tossing and turning at night. On trips, she’d have to be paired in hotel rooms with girlfriends who didn’t mind her loud snoring.
Two months after dentist Ronald Reinmiller of Landisville fitted her with one of the newest oral appliances on the market, she’s a new person.

Full Story Here

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