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Aerolate Sr From Fleming Pharms With Theophylline 260mg

Ingredients: Theophylline
Dosage Form and Administration: "capsule, Extended Release; Oral"
Drug Trade Name: Aerolate Sr
Firm: Fleming Pharms
Strength: 260MG
New Drug Application Type: A
Drug Application Number:85075
Product Number: 1
Approval Date: 11/24/1986
Reference Listed Drug: No
Type: DISCN
Applicant Full Name: Fleming And Co Pharmaceuticals Inc

Driving Stoned

While no one contests the implications of drinking and driving, there is public policy debate concerning driving while stoned. Studies indicate that acute marijuana use can mildly impair psychomotor skills, but it is usually not severe or long lasting. Minor impairments in tracking, eye movement control and reaction time appear in close course and driving simulator studies. These studies also indicate that marijuana users tend to increase the distance between the vehicle ahead and to decrease overall driving speed. Overall the impairments exhibited by marijuana users are much less severe than those who consume alcohol. Unlike impaired alcoholic drivers, marijuana users are often aware of the impairment and adjust some driving habits accordingly, like by driving with more caution or putting off driving altogether until the driver feels competent to do so.

Not a High Level of Accidents

The impairment resulting from low level marijuana use does not indicate a high level of on-road traffic accidents. A National Highway Traffic Safety Administration study reported there was no indication that cannabis use was a cause of fatal crashes among drivers who tested positive for the drug. A study published by the Canadian Journal of Public Health that reviewed 10 years of United States auto fatalities found that drivers with a blood alcohol levels of 0.05 (a level below the legal limit of 0.08), were three times more likely to engage in unsafe driving practices that preceded a fatal crash than people who tested positive for marijuana use. A study in France revealed a similar conclusion, finding that drivers with blood alcohol levels not exceeding 0.05 had four times the risk of having a fatal accident than marijuana users who tested positive for high levels of cannabis, above 5 ng/ml. Both studies indicate that overall few traffic accidents were due to a driver operating a vehicle while impaired by marijuana use.
Driving while consuming marijuana is not a recommended activity. Since the psychomotor impairment from marijuana use is relatively minor and transitory it is advisable that users wait a few hours before operating their vehicles.
Source: http://www.norml.org/index.cfm?Group_ID=7459

Sleep

Think of everything people do during the day. Try to guess which activity is so important that people should devote one-third of every day doing it. The first things that come to mind are probably: working, spending time with family or pursuing leisure activities. However, there is something else people should be doing about one-third of the time--sleeping.
Many people view sleep as merely a "down time" when the brain shuts off and the body rests. In a rush to meet work, school, family or household responsibilities, people cut back on sleep, thinking it will not be a problem, because all of these other activities seem much more important. However, research reveals that a number of vital tasks carried out during sleep help to maintain good health and enable people to function at the highest levels.
While people sleep, the brain is hard at work forming the pathways necessary for learning and creating memories and new insights. Without enough sleep, people cannot focus and pay attention or respond quickly. A lack of sleep may even cause mood problems. In addi­tion, growing evidence shows that a chronic lack of sleep increases the risk for developing obesity, diabetes, cardiovascular disease and infections.
Despite the mounting support for the notion that adequate sleep, like adequate nutrition and physical activity, is vital to well­being, people are sleeping less. The nonstop "24/7" nature of the world today encourages longer or nighttime work hours and offers continual access to entertainment and other activities. To keep up, people cut back on sleep. A common myth is that people can learn to get by on little sleep (such as less than six hours a night) with no adverse consequences. Research suggests, however, that adults need at least seven or eight hours of sleep each night to feel rested. Indeed, in 1910, most people slept nine hours a night. But recent surveys show the average adult now sleeps less than seven hours a night and more than one-third of adults report daytime sleepiness so severe that it interferes with work and social functioning at least a few days each month. As many as 70 million Americans may be affected by chron­ic sleep loss or sleep disorders, at an annual cost of $16 billion in health care expenses and $50 billion in lost productivity.
What happens when people do not get enough sleep? Can people make up for lost sleep during the week by sleeping more on the weekends? How does sleep change as people become older? Is snoring a problem? Do people suffer from sleep disorders? Read on to find the answers to these questions and to better understand what sleep is and why it is so necessary. Learn about common sleep myths and practical tips for getting adequate sleep, coping with jet lag and nighttime shift work and avoiding dangerous drowsy driving. Many common sleep disorders go unrecognized and doctors cannot treat them.

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