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  • 20% scientists on drugs?

    Link....

    Scientists take drugs to boost brain power: study

    Twenty percent of scientists admit to using performance-enhancing prescription drugs for non-medical reasons, according to a survey released Wednesday by Nature, Britain's top science journal.

    The overwhelming majority of these med-taking brainiacs said they indulged in order to "improve concentration," and 60 percent said they did so on a daily or weekly basis.

    The 1,427 respondents -- most of them in the United States -- completed an informal, online survey posted on the "Nature Network" Web forum, a discussion site for scientists operated by the Nature Publishing Group.

    More than a third said that they would feel pressure to give their children such drugs if they knew other kids at school were also taking them.

    "These are academics working in scientific institutions," Ruth Francis, who handles press relations for the group, told AFP.

    The survey focused on three drugs widely available by prescription or via the Internet.

    Ritalin, a trade name for methylphenidate, is a stimulant normally used to treat attention-deficit hyperactivity disorder, especially in children. Modafinil -- marketed at Provigil -- is prescribed to treat sleep disorders, but is also effective against general fatigue and jet lag.

    Both medications are common currency on college campuses, used as "study aids" to sharpen performance and wakefulness.

    "It doesn't seem to be causing too much trouble since most [students] use the drugs not to get high but to function better," Brian Doyle, a clinical pyschiatrist at Georgetown University Medical Centre, told a US newspaper last month. "When exams are over, they go back to normal and stop abusing the drugs."

    Other experts expressed more concern about what the survey revealed.

    "It alerted us to the fact that scientists, like others, are looking for short cuts," Wilson Compton, director of epidemiology and prevention research at the US National Institute for Drug Abuse (NIDA), told AFP.

    Ritalin, he noted, can become addictive, even if it has proven safe and effective when taken as prescribed.

    The third class of drugs included in the survey was beta blockers, prescribed for cardiac arrhythmia and popular among performers due to its anti-anxiety effect.

    Of the 288 scientists who said that had taken one or more of these drugs outside of a medical context, three-fifths had used Ritalin, and nearly half Provigil. Only 15 percent were fans of beta blockers.

    More than a third procured their meds via the Internet, with the rest buying them in pharmacy.

    Other reasons cited for popping pills were focusing on a specific task, and counteracting jet lag.

    Almost 70 percent of 1,258 respondents who answered the question said they would be willing to risk mild side effects in order to "boost your brain power" by taking cognitive-enhancing drugs.

    Half of the drug-takers reported such effects, including headaches, jitteriness, anxiety and sleeplessness.

    Wilson of the NIDA expressed surprise at the rate of substance abuse shown, but cautioned that the survey did not meet rigorous scientific standards.

    "This is a volunteer poll of people responding to an Internet survey. There might be an over-representation," he said.

    But previous research has shown that, as the boundary between treating illness and enhancing wellbeing continues to blur, taking performance-boosting products continues to gain in cultural acceptance.

    "Like the rise in cosmetic surgery, use of cognitive enhancers is likely to increase as bioethical and psychological concerns are overcome," opined Nature in a commentary.

    In the survey, 80 percent of all the scientists -- even those who did not use these drugs -- defended the right of "healthy humans" to take them as work boosters, and more than half said their use should not be restricted, even for university entrance exams.

    More than 57 percent of the respondents were 35 years old or younger.
    Dr. Mordrid
    ----------------------------
    An elephant is a mouse built to government specifications.

    I carry a gun because I can't throw a rock 1,250 fps

  • #2
    I find that VERY hard to swallow.
    FT.

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    • #3
      This is not without precedent...

      Remember that cocaine and several opiates were over-the-counter medicines back in the day: and quite a few great minds of the period used them and recommended their DAILY use... several admitting addiction only much later.

      Don't assume for a minute that this does not/ cannot happen in today's world: tomorrow it could well be that drugs such as Ritalin, Modnafinil might be looked at today as yesteryear's cocaine was... and viewed with about as much revulsion in the future, as cocaine is today.

      I really do not like the direction that drug companies have taken... marketing prescription drugs to patients rather than doctors. This "pill for every ill" direction is hurting us in new and unexpected ways.
      Hey, Donny! We got us a German who wants to die for his country... Oblige him. - Lt. Aldo Raine

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      • #4
        Originally posted by Fat Tone View Post
        I find that VERY hard to swallow.
        So you use injections?

        I don't know... I do believe that many a student has used such drugs during his study, so in that aspect, one might wonder about what happens after the studies...
        But still...


        Jörg
        pixar
        Dream as if you'll live forever. Live as if you'll die tomorrow. (James Dean)

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        • #5
          With the number of physicians I ran into that were using one substance or another it doesn't surprise me at all.
          Dr. Mordrid
          ----------------------------
          An elephant is a mouse built to government specifications.

          I carry a gun because I can't throw a rock 1,250 fps

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