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goodknight439
Guest
Good point Ed,Unless you’re referring to a song by the Rolling Stones, there is no evidence for that occurring in large numbers. Tranquilizers were prescribed when medically necessary. But my experience with health care is that most doctors were and still are reluctant to prescribe tranquilizers. I suspect you’ve been taken in by a mythology involving bored suburban housewives
Facts are good.
God bless,
Ed
Valium was a “fad” of sorts. You are right, it wasn’t that the life style “drove women to pills” True the 60’s was a transitional period in lifestyle as has been discussed ad nauseum here. But the stresses of today’s hurry up world on women (and men) are much greater than ever before, even then. Back then as life was getting stressful, the medical community didn’t realize how harmful and addictive those “little yellow pills” were so they were innocently dolled out as they were thought to be harmless. It is also likely that some of those women back then who were prescribed Valium etc. legitimately needed anti depressants or anti-anxiety medication. These Meds are now shown on TV every half hour, we have all seen them: Cymbalta, Zoloft, Celexa, Wellbutrin, etc. However in the 60’s drugs for mental illness treatment were not common outside of psychiatric facilities and were not very safe medications either.
Now I am waiting to hear the outcry that tranquilizers were a man (male) made plot to subdue women.