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PAULA ZAHN NOW
Popular Sleeping Pill May Cause Problems; Federal
Government Goes After Internet Child Pornography Ring; Helpful Dashboard
Cameras; Controversial Debate on Child Support and Parenthood
Aired March 17, 2006 - 20:00 ET
THIS IS A RUSH TRANSCRIPT. THIS COPY MAY NOT BE IN
ITS FINAL FORM AND MAY BE UPDATED.
PAULA ZAHN, CNN ANCHOR: Good evening, everyone.
Thank you so much for joining us.
Tonight, the latest developments in
a global high-tech pornography ring that has shattered many young lives.
(BEGIN VIDEOTAPE)
In tonight's "Vital Signs," we dig deeper
into an amazing story we reported on earlier this week. I am going to
introduce you now to a woman who has quite a story of her own to tell. Her
name is Janet Makinen. And she's part of a multimillion-dollar
class-action lawsuit against the maker of Ambien, the most popular
sleeping pill in the country right now.
Makinen claims it caused
her to stuff herself with food while she was completely asleep,
sleep-eating, believe it or not. She says she gained 50 pounds before she
even realized what was happening to her, and that it almost destroyed her
life.
Earlier, I spoke with her and her attorney, Susan Chana
Lask, for tonight's "Vital Signs."
(BEGIN VIDEOTAPE)
ZAHN:
Thank you both for joining us.
JANET MAKINEN, SUFFERED FROM
SLEEP-EATING: Thank you.
ZAHN: So, Janet, how bad was your
insomnia?
MAKINEN: Very bad. I would not sleep for a week,
week-and-a- half at a time.
ZAHN: So, you were prescribed Ambien,
and what happened?
MAKINEN: At first, I got a really good night's
sleep. And several weeks after starting to take it, I began to walk and
eat in my sleep.
ZAHN: How many pounds did you
gain?
MAKINEN: Fifty.
ZAHN: During the course of time? Fifty
pounds?
MAKINEN: Yes.
ZAHN: What the heck were you eating
during the middle of the night that made you gain all that
weight?
MAKINEN: I would eat anything that was available to me.
Bags of candy, loaves of bread, uncooked Spanish rice, bags of potato
chips. If there was no bags of anything I would open up cans of soup or
vegetables or...
ZAHN: And eat it cold.
MAKINEN: ... Eat it
cold, yes.
ZAHN: And when you'd wake up in the morning, and see
this mess that you left behind, either in the kitchen or in bed, what did
you think?
MAKINEN: The first time it happened, I thought it was my
husband. I thought my husband had come home from work and cooked, made
something to eat before he went to bed. Flipped on the bedroom light to
scream at him and I saw barbecue sauce all over the side of my bed. I was
like, my God. And I realized that it wasn't him, it was me. And I was
frightened. I didn't know what to do. I never once associated it with my
sleeping pill.
ZAHN: And yet this went on, year after year, up to
six years.
MAKINEN: Yes.
ZAHN: So a lot of people were
scratching their heads saying I don't quite buy that. How could you not
begin to think there was some sort of association between Ambien and your
sleep eating?
MAKINEN: I never did, I thought that I was going
crazy.
ZAHN: Is it true that it got so bad at one point that your
husband actually was trying to get food out of your mouth while you were
sleeping and eating.
MAKINEN: Yes, he would come home and sometimes
find me in bed with food in my mouth and he would have to take it out of
my mouth, he was so afraid that I would choke to death.
ZAHN: Would
he say anything to you or would you say anything to him?
MAKINEN:
He would just plead with me, can't you stop doing this? Can't you stop
walking in your sleep and eating in your sleep? He would try to guide me
back to bed when he was there and it was happening. And he would try to
fool me and trick me and say, "Oh, honey, I'll get it for you. You go on
back to bed," thinking I would go back to bed and forget about the
food.
ZAHN: Did he describe to you how out of it you
were?
MAKINEN: He actually would say, "it was like you were in a
trance, like I couldn't connect with you. Your eyes -- you were looking at
me but it was like your eyes were dead. They had no emotion to them."
ZAHN: How sick did you get, Janet, from this excessive
eating?
MAKINEN: Sometimes I would eat so much that when I went
back to bed and laid down, it would just all come up on me. I would vomit
it up and it would be everywhere on the bed.
ZAHN: But what is so
hard to understand about your story is if this had gone on for a couple of
months, you could kind of understand why you wouldn't call a doctor. But
after six years of this, of consistently getting sick, you still didn't
see a doctor.
MAKINEN: I thought that they would think I was
nuts.
ZAHN: So Susan, does that weaken the case here? During the
process of getting up and eating while you were sleeping, you developed an
ulcer, and this regurgitation problem and yet you still didn't seek any
medical help?
SUSAN CHANA LASK, ATTORNEY: Well, it doesn't weaken
the case at all. It's -- the case is all about the company not putting out
the warnings. They knew about this. They knew about this in the research
and development before it was put out. And there is hundreds of people
that have the same exact story as Janet, that they think they're going
crazy. They're afraid to tell anybody about it.
ZAHN: I want to
read part of the statement from the company who makes Ambien about
warnings that accompany the pill.
Quote, "when taken as prescribed,
Ambien is a safe and effective treatment for insomnia. Sleep-related
eating disorder is included in the prescribing information as a possible
rare sleepwalking event."
LASK: That is something that they're
putting out there now. It just wasn't happening possibly last year and
definitely years before.
ZAHN: So you maintain that the people
involved in this class action suit never had any warning, that there could
potentially be any linkage at all between the taking of Ambien and sleep
eating or sleepwalking?
LASK: From the research I've done and from
all of the people I've spoken to, everybody has told me there was no
warning and I haven't found a warning yet and I've seen past pharmacy
labels and there was absolutely no warning that said sleepwalking or sleep
eating could be an adverse side effect.
ZAHN: What have those six
years cost you?
MAKINEN: Wow, I've never been asked that before. It
cost me my peace of mind for six years. Is cost me, you know, thinking
there was something mentally wrong with me, that you know, fear.
Constantly afraid to reach out to the people who loved me, who were
standing beside me now. That I couldn't think that I could tell
them.
ZAHN: Why are you so convinced even after this information
came out that it in fact was Ambien that caused your problem? MAKINEN: Why
am I so convinced that it was Ambien? Because I never walked or ate in my
sleep in my whole life. And I took Ambien and did it. I got off the
Ambien, I've never done it since.
ZAHN: Janet, thanks so much for
sharing your story with us tonight. Susan, appreciate you dropping by as
well.
(END VIDEOTAPE)
ZAHN: So here now is the response from
the maker of Ambien. "It is difficult to determine with certainty where a
particular instance of sleepwalking is drug induced, spontaneous in
origin, or result of an underlying disorder." The case, we'll keep on
watching from here.
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