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by flir 879 days ago
I guess thalidomide is the archetypal example in the back of every regulatory authority's mind. Nobody wants to risk a repeat of that.

In the case of Adderall, amphetamine was sold over the counter between the mid-1930s and 1964 (in the UK. Other countries, other dates) so there must have been a fair amount of additional research to take into account.

Interestingly, the first report of amphetamine being a treatment for what we would now call ADHD was 1937. We should have had this sorted out three generations ago; instead I coasted straight on through the school system in the 1980s without attracting a second glance.

1 comments

Right. I guess with thalidomide the negative side effects weren't visible until after a pregnancy - which is why it took awhile to catch on.

I'm not saying I"m acutely worried about adderall, just the possibility there are drugs that take decades to show negative effects. It doesn't seem like the testing system we have in place would have any way to detect that.