North State Journal — Vol. 2., Issue 39

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VOLUME 2 ISSUE 39

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WWW.NSJONLINE.COM |

WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 27, 2017

inside Wake, Duke football look to stay unbeaten, Sports

EAMON QUEENEY | NORTH STATE JOURNAL

Duke University Hospital anaesthesiologist Dr. Jeffrey Gadsden poses for a photograph in his office at the Durham hospital. Gadsden is on the forefront of pain management research as he looks into ways of cutting out opioids in operations as well as post surgical treatment with regional anaesthesia techniques.

the Wednesday

NEWS BRIEFING

Maria to skirt Outer Banks on Wednesday Raleigh Hurricane Maria, which pummeled Puerto Rico as a category 4 leaving 3.4 million people still without power, is expected to blow past N.C.’s Outer Banks on Wednesday before taking a sharp right and heading out to sea. The National Hurricane Center reported Maria as a Category 1 on Tuesday but expected it to degrade to a tropical storm by Wednesday. Tropical storm warnings are active across the Outer Banks and 10,000 people have evacuated from Dare and Hyde counties in anticipation of high winds and flooding.

Weiner gets 21 months in prison for explicit messages to NC girl New York Former Congressman Anthony Weiner was sentenced to 21 months in prison on Monday for sending sexually explicit messages to a 15-year-old N.C. girl, setting off a scandal that played a role in the 2016 U.S. presidential election. Weiner, 53, started to cry as soon as the sentence was read by a U.S. District Judge in Manhattan. He pleaded guilty in May to transferring obscene messages to a minor, and agreed he would not appeal any sentence of 27 months or less. Weiner’s lawyers had asked that he be sentenced to probation rather than prison. The investigation into Weiner’s exchanges with a Gaston County high school student roiled the 2016 U.S. presidential campaign in its final days, when authorities found emails containing classified information on Weiner’s laptop from his wife Huma Abedin, an aide to Hillary Clinton.

NORTH

STATE

JOURNaL ELEVATE THE CONVERSATION

NC AG Stein recuses himself in redistricting challenges Stein announced he would hand oversight to NCDOJ attorneys so he can speak out publicly against Republican redistricting, a move legislative leaders and legal scholars described as choosing politics over professional duty By Jeff Moore North State Journal RALEIGH — North Carolina Attorney General Josh Stein recently announced he would recuse himself in any legal challenges to new legislative redistricting maps so he can continue to speak out publicly against partisan gerrymandering. The new maps were passed as a result of federal court orders that deemed maps drawn by Republicans in 2011 unconstitutional gerrymanders. “In a democracy, voters should choose their elected representatives, not the other way around,” said Stein in a statement. “Partisan gerrymandering turns this fundamental principle upside down. It rigs the system against the voters in favor of the politicians who draw their own districts. Partisan gerrymandering undermines democracy itself. It’s wrong and damaging, no matter which party

“The problem with any opioid, it is so hard to know what dose will affect you.” — Dr. Jeffrey Gadsden, the director of the Regional Anesthesiology and Acute Pain Medicine fellowship

PHOTO PROVIDED BY THE OFFICE OF SEN. TILLIS

In a press conference at the U.S. Capitol, Sen. Thom Tillis (R- N.C.) introduced legislation Monday that would create a merit-based system for illegal immigrants brought to the U.S. as children to earn legal status.

Tillis proposes SUCCEED Act as answer to illegal immigration debate

See REDISTRICTING, page A3

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DURHAM — As the opioid drug crisis escalates in North Carolina and state and national leaders across the nation scramble to combat the growing epidemic, anesthesiologists at Duke University and other leading health institutes are digging down to the root of the problem. From 1999 to 2016 more than 12,000 North Carolinians have died from opioid-related overdoses, with the vast majority involving pain medications such as oxycodone or hydrocodone. In 2015 alone, there were more than 1,110 opioid-related deaths in North Carolina — a 73 percent increase from 2005 according to the most recent data. Wake and Mecklenburg counties led death tolls, followed by Forsyth and then Guilford counties. “The problem with any opioid, it is so hard to know what dose will affect you,” says Dr. Jeffrey Gadsden, the director of the Regional Anesthesiology and Acute Pain Medicine fellowship and an associate professor at Duke University. “In a hospital, we are trained really well and we can control that dose of morphine, be able to predict what will be good for you but also manage the side effects — which the most dangerous

— Campbell University law professor Greg Wallace

New plan would require a clean criminal record and education, employment, or military service to stay in the U.S. By Donna King North State Journal

Jones & Blount

$2.00

By Mollie Young North State Journal

“It’s hard to do a good job when your boss is out making public statements denouncing the very thing you’re defending.”

Pilot tests of a Granular Activated Carbon filter are underway in Wilmington for cleaning GenX out of the Cape Fear River.

20177 52016

How anaesthesiologists are localizing pain to avoid prescriptions

See DUKE DOCTOR, page A2

INSIDE

5

Surgery without opioids

PHOTO COURTESY OF CFPUA

RALEIGH — On Monday Sen. Thom Tillis (R-N.C.) filed legislation that would set up a new system of tougher work-study requirements and criminal record checks for DACA recipients to get or keep

legal status. The SUCCEED Act is a merit-based program for children of illegal immigrants. Co-sponsored by Sen. James Lankford (R-Okla.), the bill would require applicants undergo a criminal background check and take one of three tracks to legal status: education, employment or military service. Tillis and Lankford emphasized that the proposal doesn’t allow them to “jump the line” to citizenship or give protection to their family members, often called “chain migration.” “It’s setting a timeline out there See TILLIS, page A3


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