As they should with any drug, doctors discuss Sustiva's side effects, especially sleep disturbances, with their patients.
PETER REISS, MD: It's common in patients who you put on efavirenz. But in the majority of patients, it's transient. So it's something that you need to forewarn them about. You need to tell them before you put them on that this may appear. This is what it may look like, that they shouldn't be surprised, that they shouldn't get scared and try to talk them through.
ANNOUNCER: Sleep disturbances are not the only central nervous system side effects with Sustiva.
GRAEME MOYLE, MD: Some people feel that they have a dizziness where they've not really got the spins, but they just feel as though they're a little perhaps intoxicated by the medication.
ANNOUNCER: That's exactly how Winston felt the first time he took the drug.
WINSTON BATCHELOR: About an hour, hour and a half later, I got up out of the chair and it was like someone had drugged or given me a bottle of wine. I felt so inebriated, I just fell back into the chair and my world started spinning and everything started moving.
ANNOUNCER: Other, less common, side effects with some of the non-nucleoside medicines include headache, impaired concentration, and depression. To help patients manage the side effects associated with Sustiva, doctors prescribe taking the drug at a time-of-day when the side effects may be the most tolerable.