"When the application for a new sedative called Kevadon--commonly known as thalidomide--landed on Frances Kelsey's desk at the FDA in 1960, it seemed destined to sail through the review process. The drug, billed as entirely risk-free, was already being sold in forty-six countries. But when Kelsey learned that the drug caused terrible birth defects, she and a team of dedicated doctors, parents, and journalists fought Merrell, the drug's American manufacturer, and Chemie-Gruenenthal, the German company founded by former Nazis that first synthesized the drug, to recall the product. It marked a rare victory in America's perennial battle between capitalism and consumer protection"--Provided by publisher.
hid | mid | miid | nid | wid | location_code | location | barcode | callnum | dewey | created | updated |
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3743588 | 7061952 | 2377 | 856441 | 976202 | DUS | 155 | DNS053993 | 615 VAN | 615 | 1695044385 | 1736800991 |