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Wednesday, February 1, 2017

I N SI D E

Serving Cork for 120 years

Women on Wednesday! Fashion Beauty & Health Family Lifestyle

Wrapping cancer patients in love

Edition No: 36433

RRP: €1.50

IWISH shaping a better world for female students

Internet drugs warning And alcohol deadly says pathologist

Daughters: Psychiatric care 24/7 call

PATHOLOGY laboratories can’t keep up with the influx of socalled “head shop” drugs, which are becoming more commonly involved in unexpected deaths, a leading forensic pathologist has stated.

■ Kevin O’Neill THE family of a man who killed his wife and stabbed his daughter has called for the introduction of 24-hour psychiatric services to be introduced. An inquest into the deaths of Michael and Valerie Greaney yesterday heard that Mr Greaney suffered a mental breakdown while struggling with financial difficulties. In a statement issued afterwards, his daughters Michelle and Sarah said that they don’t seek to hold anybody responsible for the tragedy. “They especially hope that the relevant agencies in the Cork area have access to on-call forensic psychiatric assistance on a 24hour basis,” the statement said. ■ See Page 6.

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Michelle Greaney at yesterday’s inquest at Midleton.

Picture: Eddie O’Hare

Assistant State Pathologist Dr Margot Bolster revealed that new types of synthetic drugs are becoming increasingly common in the cases that she deals with. “You can go on to the internet and order anything you want, so it’s a huge problem now,” Dr Bolster said. “There are newer drugs coming on the market every single day. “The lab cannot keep up with them, so you have a sudden unexpected death in a young person, send off the blood for toxicology it comes back negative but you know that the person, from what was described, was on them (synthetic drugs).” While the role of drug use in unexpected death is “becoming increasingly a problem”, Dr Bolster argued that alcohol remains a primary issue, as it “runs through every age group, every walk of life.” Dr Bolster told an audience of sec-

Dr Bolster: Drugs and alcohol are big killers. ■ Audrey Ellard Walsh ondary school students and teachers at Cork University Hospital that alcohol was a factor in the vast majority of cases she deals with. “One very common theme that runs through all of my natural deaths and unnatural deaths is alcohol. At least 90% of my work is alcohol related in some way, either directly through acute alcohol poisoning from drinking too much, or the effects of long-term alcohol abuse on the heart, the brain, the pancreas and the other organs. “And what happens outside the pub? The fights develop and you get all sorts of accidents.” ■ Continued on Page 2.


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