this post was submitted on 15 Sep 2024
121 points (96.9% liked)
Creepy Wikipedia
3968 readers
25 users here now
A fediverse community for curating Wikipedia articles that are oddly fascinating, eerily unsettling, or make you shiver with fear and disgust
Guidelines:
-
Follow the Code of Conduct
-
Do NOT report posts YOU don't consider creepy
-
Strictly Wikipedia submissions only
-
Please follow the post naming convention: Wikipedia Article Title - Short Synopsis
-
Tick the NSFW box for submissions with inappropriate thumbnails.
-
Please refrain from any offensive language/profanities in the posts titles, unless necessary (e.g. it's in the original article's title).
Mandatory:
If you didn't find an article "creepy," you must announce it in the thread so everyone will know that you didn't find it creepy
founded 1 year ago
MODERATORS
you are viewing a single comment's thread
view the rest of the comments
view the rest of the comments
The reason drug ads all say "may cause [list of terrible things]" ultimately traces back to thalidomide.
The system which requires the monitoring and reporting of potentially adverse events, even after a drug has got through trials is called pharmacovigilance. That's what generates the data those risks are based on and it was developed in the wake of the thalidomide disaster to help prevent it from happening again.
Yep but if they make a list as large as the medical dictionary it's not really helpful is it
It's insane seeing American ads where they tell you they have a new pill and follow it with a list of genuinely horrific possibilities 'may make your spleen gain it's own sentience, may invade Poland, stop taking if your penis swells to 80x its normal size and weaps tears of flaming blood...'
Are Americans so used to it that they just tune it all out like with the California cancer warnings? I feel like I could never get used to that and I'd probably end up a paranoid doctor avoiding loon with warnings about big pharma written all over my car.
I don't know who those commercials are even for. It's not like you can walk into a pharmacy and get whatever you want. A doctor still has to prescribe it to you and hopefully they're not letting patients decide what to prescribe.