Introduction
DESCRIPTION More professionals are turning to attention deficit medications, like Adderall, to increase their productivity at work. Elizabeth D. Herman for The New York Times
Drugs like Adderall were once only prescribed to help highly distractable children with attention deficit disorders focus on their school work. Then college students found those drugs, amphetamine-like stimulants, could increase their ability to study. Now a growing number of workers use them to help compete, whether or not they have A.D.H.D.
What will happen as these drugs are more widely used in the workplace?
This Is the Probable Future
Anjan Chatterjee, author, "The Aesthetic Brain"
While in sports, doping is constrained by regulation and ideas about fairness, no such constraints exist in the workplace.
Martha Farah
The Risks Outweigh the Benefits
Martha Farah, cognitivie neuroscientist
Regular use on the job is an invitation to dependence. And drug dependence makes ordinary workplace pressures look delightful in comparison.
Julian Savulescu
Equalizers in a Stressful World, If Used Properly
Julian Savulescu, Oxford University
Prohibition never works. The best approach is to learn more about the drugs, regulate them and teach people about them.
Heather Brady
Productivity, Yes, But at What Cost?
Heather Brady, journalist
I’m used to two versions of my boyfriend: an exuberant, happy one on weekends and a super-calm, focused one during the week. But I wonder what he would be like at work without the medication.
Erik Parens
A Symptom of Modern Life
Erik Parens, The Hastings Center
Criticizing people who have chosen strategies we don’t think we’d ever choose is easy. Noticing that we’re afflicted with the same form of life is harder, and as important.
Article
Tuesday, February 02, 2016
Using Adderall to Get Ahead, Not to Fight A.D.H.D.
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