Nurse: Jackson requested anesthesia drug to sleep; was it found at his home?

Michael Jackson
A registered nurse who treated some of Michael Jackson’s children in January has come forward to state that he asked her for the anesthesia drug Propovol, a powerful sedative, to treat insomnia. The drug is only supposed to be administered in a hospital setting as it’s given by IV, knocks a person out quickly and can easily lead to death. Jackson admitted to the nurse that he was given the drug “a long time ago.” She told Jackson she wouldn’t get it for him as it’s not safe at all and said “If you take this you might not wake up.” Use of Propovol can lead to cardiac arrest and death:

Michael Jackson suffered from severe bouts of insomnia and pleaded for a powerful sedative despite knowing its harmful effects, a nutritionist who worked with the singer said Tuesday.

Cherilyn Lee is a holisitic health practitioner and has been in healthcare for 23 years, her Web site states.

Cherilyn Lee, a registered nurse who first met Jackson in January to treat his children for a common cold, said she rejected his requests for Diprivan and informed him of the side effects.

“I told him this medication is not safe,” Lee said. “He said, ‘I just want to get some sleep. You don’t understand. I just want to be able to be knocked out and go to sleep.’ ”

“I told him — and it is so painful that I actually felt it in my whole spirit — ‘If you take this you might not wake up.’ ”

CNN could not independently verify whether Lee worked with Jackson.

When asked about Lee’s account, Jackson family attorney Londell McMillan said:

“I wonder why someone would make a comment about drugs when they haven’t seen him take the drug or anyone who administered it.”

The drug, known by its generic name Propofol, is administered intravenously as an anesthetic during surgeries.

An initial dose puts a person to sleep. An overdose can lead to cardiac arrest, doctors say.

Jackson died June 25 at the age of 50. Authorities are awaiting toxicology results to determine what killed him.

Lee is licensed as a registered nurse, according to the California Board of Registered Nursing Web site. According to her Web site, she is a proponent of alternative medicine that uses a holistic approach.

Lee said that four days before Jackson’s death, she received a call from a Jackson staff member who said the singer felt that one side of his body was cold; the other hot.

“I could hear Mr. Jackson saying in the background, ‘Please have her come see me now. Can she come now?’ ”
Lee, who was in Florida at the time, said she told Jackson’s staffers to take him to a hospital.

“I was really afraid because of the symptoms they were telling me,” she said. “It could have meant something going on in the nervous system or something cardiovascular.”

After his death, Lee said she didn’t go to the authorities.

“When I saw it on the news, I really didn’t know what to do,” she said. “I was saddened. I heard there was a physician there.”

Lee also could not say why Jackson would call on her, when the last time she saw him was three months ago.

But, she added, she didn’t know of any doctors who would have given him the drug.

“I asked him, ‘What doctor gave you this drug?’ ” she said, when the singer initially brought up the medicine. “He told me, ‘Oh it was a long time ago.’ ”

Dr. Rakesh Marwah of the anesthesiology department at the Stanford University School of Medicine said Propofol can lead to cardiac arrest, which is suspected in Jackson’s death.

“Propofol slows down the heart rate and slows down the respiratory rate and slows down the vital functions of the body,” he said.

[From CNN]

TMZ is reporting that this same drug was found in Michael Jackson’s residence by the police. While TMZ can be kind of tasteless with some of their stories, they’re usually correct when it comes to having serious leads and are known for being the first outlet to break celebrity news out of LA. I would bet this story is accurate as it doesn’t seem like something they’d make up based on this report from the nurse. They’re also reporting that Lidocaine was found in the home. Lidocaine is a local anesthetic and is often used before Propovol as it can cause pain when it’s administered.

It looks like Jackson wasn’t just mixing heavy duty prescription painkillers and that he may have been taking drugs meant for only surgical purposes. I wonder if that’s why the cops are so eager to talk to his plastic surgeon as he presumably has the stuff on hand. Given how much work Jackson had done, that may be how he became familiar with the drug and started asking for it to help him sleep. Sadly, not everyone told him “no.”

Michael Jackson is shown on 11/23/06. Credit: PRPhotos

Michael Jackson

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14 Responses to “Nurse: Jackson requested anesthesia drug to sleep; was it found at his home?”

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  1. MM says:

    I’m very sceptical about that “nurse”, and her scandalous “story”. She clearly wants 15 minutes of fame, and probably sold her story to tabloids. Very sad.

  2. Lori says:

    OMG that is a new level of crazy. I don’t even think Anna Nicole Smith had these types of drugs given to her, and she had all sorts of doctors under her thumb.

    For “sleep”?! All I can say is WTF!

  3. dewdrop says:

    I totally believe this nurse. She seems credible, and I am a nurse myself, and I know how easy these drugs can be obtained,and abused. Especially, considering that MJ was probably a hard core addict, and a master at minipulation. Throw some $$$$$ into it, and Wa-La, you have your poison.

  4. Lem says:

    CNN should not be sourcing a source they cannot verify.
    they are CNN

  5. lena says:

    thank you Lem, what the hell, CNN is supposed to be a credible news source. And furthermore all of these MJ asked for this drug in 1995 but i told him no stories are irrelevant until the toxicology report comes back with what MJ had in his system

  6. Prissa says:

    LOL at dewdrop: Wa-La.
    Do you mean voilà? Not being snarky, I just thought that was cute…

  7. dewdrop says:

    Yep, Voila Prissa!!! I liked the phonetic version.

  8. Hieronymus Grex says:

    Leeches. They crawl out of the woodwork to get their piece even after he’s dead and buried.

  9. BlueSkies says:

    Lem, Lina, CNN has stopped being a credible news source about eight months ago when they staged their own blooper on a news cast. They’ve sold out. Proof is by looking at what stories they allow comments to be posted. Go have a look.

  10. Jobie says:

    a- Propofol
    b- not a good sleeping aid as it has a VERY short duration (2 to 10 minutes) unless it is maintained via IV.
    c- propofol causes respiratory depression in acute use and prolonged sedation. Therefor anyone on propofol for long durations will be intubated to assist ventilation. Anyone on short duration of propofol are closely monitored with ventilation assisting gear close at hand.

    I find it very unlikely that he would request such a strong, dangerous and useless sedative when there are many less deadly ones on the market.

  11. Lia says:

    Jobie: apparently, they found propofol in his home. It would not surprise me at all that someone would give this to him. Wave enough money at some people and they’ll do anything. True, it has a short duration, but when patients wake up from being given propofol, they don’t immediately get up and dance a jig. They are dopey for a fair amount of time afterwards.

  12. Tasha says:

    Jobie is correct! As an RN myself in the PACU (recovery room) for half of my 30 years as a nurse, it is a safe drug when used in a safe and ethical manner under the direction of an Anesthesiologist. I also have had to maintain IV drips of Diprivan to keep patients sedated while on a ventilator. As an RN, we were only able to give up to a certain dosage/range continuously as it was policy that after that dose was acheived we would then be giving anesthesia which is OUT of our scope of practice. For the right amount of $$$$, anyone and including medical personnel could have administered Diprivan before to MJ. I’ve even had patients show up DOA to the ER that have had “surgery” by an MD not licensed in a certain field who operated on a weekend and had their gardener “administer” what is called IV Conscious Sedation. Diprivan would NOT have given MJ the type of sleep that he needed. A medication induced coma is not sleep! It’s even known as “milk of amnesia”. Come on now, who was dumb enough to give him that drug or that information or suggestion to use it? Oh, I forgot, this is Hollywood, and lifestyles of the rich and famous…and now dead.

  13. Nurse Call says:

    This is quite clearly just another attempt to jump on the media bandwagon and i find it sick that we have not discovered a better way of dealing with these people rather than letting them get away with it.

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