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August 28, 2024

Trailer: The Devil in the Details

Frances Oldham Kelsey, the Doctor who Said No to Thalidomide.
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Episode Description

In the 1950s, a German drug company developed a new sedative that was supposed to be 100% safe: thalidomide. So safe, in fact, it was promoted to women as a treatment for morning sickness. It quickly became a bestseller. But in the early 1960s, shocking news started coming out of Europe. Thousands of babies were being born with shortened arms and legs, heart defects, and other serious problems. Many died. 

In the United States things were different, thanks to one principled, strong-minded skeptic who joined the Federal Drug Administration in 1960 as a medical reviewer. One of her first assignments was to review the approval application of that very wonder drug, thalidomide. But the application was, to her mind, flawed. 

Dr. Frances Oldham Kelsey was a physician, a pharmacologist, and a nitpicker who refused to be intimidated by big pharma. 

Starting in September, a new five-part series from Lost Women of Science: The Devil in the Details, the Story of Frances Oldham Kelsey, The Doctor Who Said No To Thalidomide. 

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Host
Katie Hafner

Katie is co-founder and co-executive producer of The Lost Women of Science Initiative. She is the author of six non-fiction books and one novel, and was a longtime reporter for The New York Times. She is at work on her second novel.

Art & Design:
Lily Whear
Original Art:
Lisk Feng
Guests:
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Art & Design:
Lily Whear
Original Art:
Lisk Feng

Further Reading:

Episode Transcript

News announcer: Concern over the tragic effects of the new sedative thalidomide prompts President Kennedy at his press conference to call for stronger, better administered drug laws.

Katie Hafner: In the early 1960s, shocking news came out of Europe. Germany and England had been struck by an epidemic. Thousands of babies had been born with shortened arms and legs, blocked intestines, heart defects. Many died. All because of a drug their mothers had taken during pregnancy, thalidomide

Trent Stephens: It was marketed as being a very safe drug. You couldn’t overdose on it.

Katie Hafner: Starting in the late 1950s, thalidomide was sold all over the world. In Germany, it was a runaway hit for the company selling it. But in the U.S., the story was very different. The drug was never approved because of one medical reviewer at the FDA, Frances Oldham Kelsey. In September 1960 she had just started at the agency when a new drug application landed on her desk.

Cheryl Warsh: It was assumed it was a shoe in and it was a really mild sedative that, you know, just rubber stamp, let the new girl rubber stamp it.

Katie Hafner: This is the story of a woman who was a skeptic, a nitpicker. a total nightmare for big pharma, who also happened to be a scientist beyond reproach. And she wielded her bureaucrat's pen to stop one epically harmful drug from going on the market in the United States.

Join us this September on Lost Women of Science for The Devil in the Details, the story of Frances Oldham Kelsey.

Listen to the Next Episode in this Series

The Devil in the Details: Chapter One
Frances Oldham Kelsey, the Doctor who Said No to Thalidomide.