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FOUR PTSD VETERANS TAKING "DRUG COCKTAIL" DIE
IN SLEEP -- The vets, all living in West
Virginia, were
taking Paxil, Klonopin and Seroquel.

For more about veterans and PTSD, use the VA
Watchdog search engine...click here...
http://www.yourvabenefits.org/sessearch.php?q=ptsd&op=and
Story here...
http://wvgazette.com/News/200805230640
Story below:
-------------------------
Vets taking PTSD drugs die in sleep
Hurricane man's death the 4th in West Virginia
By Julie Robinson
Staff writer
A Putnam County veteran who was taking medication prescribed for
post-traumatic stress disorder died in his sleep earlier this month, in
circumstances similar to the deaths of three other area veterans earlier
this year.
Derek Johnson, 22, of Hurricane, served in the infantry in the Middle East
in 2005, where he was wounded in combat and diagnosed with post-traumatic
stress disorder while hospitalized.
Military doctors prescribed Paxil, Klonopin and Seroquel for Johnson, the
same combination taken by veterans Andrew White, 23, of Cross Lanes; Eric
Layne, 29, of Kanawha City; and Nicholas Endicott of Logan County. All
were in apparently good physical health when they died in their sleep.
Johnson was taking Klonopin and Seroquel, as prescribed, at the time of
his death, said his grandmother, Georgeann Underwood of Hurricane. Both
drugs are frequently used in combination to treat post-traumatic stress
disorder. Klonopin causes excessive drowsiness in some patients.
He
also was taking a painkiller for a back injury he sustained in a car
accident about a week before his death, but was no longer taking Paxil.
On May 1, the night before he died, Johnson called his grandfather, Duck
Underwood, and asked if he could pick up his 5-year-old son and take him
to school the next day. Johnson and his wife, Stacie, have three children,
all under 6 years old. Their car had been totaled in the accident the
previous week.
When Underwood arrived to pick up the boy the next morning, his knocks
were not answered at first. He heard Stacie Johnson screaming. She opened
the door and told him she couldn't wake her husband. They called
paramedics, who could not revive him. Doctors did not declare an immediate
cause of death.
Toxicology and autopsy results could take as long as 60 days, authorities
told the family.
"I
want to know the cause of death," said Ray Johnson, Derek's father.
"Stacie said he was fine that night. Everything was normal. He kissed her
goodnight and went to sleep."
Stan White, father of soldier Andrew White, has become an advocate for
families of returning veterans with post-traumatic stress disorder. During
his son's struggle with the disorder and since his death, White has
tracked similar cases. He knows of about eight in the tri-state area of
Kentucky, Ohio and West Virginia.
He and his wife, Shirley, introduced themselves
to the Johnsons and Underwoods at Derek's funeral and offered their help.
He is in contact with the office of Sen. Jay Rockefeller, D-W.Va., who is
a member of the Veterans' Affairs Committee. Rockefeller requested an
investigation into these deaths, which is ongoing, said Steven Broderick,
the senator's press secretary.
"When I talked to his family about Derek, I realized it was the same old
story," said White. "It was all too familiar. He was taking those same
drugs as the others, and, yes, I believe they are still prescribing that
combination."
After speaking with family members, White wonders if the patients are
taking the medicine as prescribed. He said PTSD patients suffer short-term
memory loss and shouldn't be relied upon to track their medications.
Georgeann Underwood agrees.
"You shouldn't put vulnerable, mentally unstable people on drugs like
that," she said.
An outgoing, personable young man who worked at several jobs to support
his young family, Johnson frequently was offered other jobs by customers
in the stores where he worked, Underwood said.
In 2006, he returned from the Middle East depressed and short-tempered.
Johnson had operated an M249 Squad Automatic Weapon, or rapid-fire machine
gun, and rarely spoke about his experiences there.
After his military prescriptions ran out, Johnson's medications were
prescribed by private physicians because he refused to go the VA hospitals
where he said he was required to wait long periods of time for
appointments. His grandparents paid for his medications.
"He had a very short fuse," Ray Johnson said. "That was the biggest
difference in his personality after he came back."
Until his death, he worked 12 or 16 hours a day. He was an electrical
apprentice at the John Amos Power Plant until he was let go when his work
hours approached the union limit for apprentices. He was on his way to
apply for another job when the car he drove was rear-ended on April 24.
Johnson died May 2.
To contact staff writer Julie Robinson, call 348-1230.
-------------------------
posted by Larry
Scott
Founder and Editor
VA Watchdog dot Org
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