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The Shadow of the Thalidomide Tragedy
Published January 17, 2017 | Best in Video
In 1960, a new wonder drug was slated to arrive on American shores—a sedative that was said to treat a range of other ills. A
hypnotic, as the doctors call it, that was the answer to a prayer. Its
generic name was Thalidomide. The hallmark defining quality of
Thalidomide was its safety. So safe that, in Germany, there was no
prescription needed. The German company that developed Thalidomide, Chemie GrĂ¼nenthal, claimed that even pregnant women could take it. The
drug
company had handed out samples of this drug all over the place, starting with employees of its own company. On Christmas day in 1956, a baby girl was born in Germany without ears, and she was the daughter of an employee of the drug company GrĂ¼nenthal. No immediate connection was made to Thalidomide, which soon sold nearly as well as aspirin in some European countries.
company had handed out samples of this drug all over the place, starting with employees of its own company. On Christmas day in 1956, a baby girl was born in Germany without ears, and she was the daughter of an employee of the drug company GrĂ¼nenthal. No immediate connection was made to Thalidomide, which soon sold nearly as well as aspirin in some European countries.
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