In the late 1950s and early 1960s the drug Thalidomide (marketed in
the UK by Distillers Company without sufficient testing) was a
sedative and medication prescribed for morning sickness. The
Thalidomide tragedy is the story of one of the worst disasters ever
inflicted by medicine which led to thousands of babies worldwide being
born with a range of birth defects. ‘The ugly story of a good
fight’ Fifty years after its first publication in 1976 Routledge is
now reissuing Thalidomide: My Fight with a substantial new
introduction by the author. It is the powerful story of one man’s
battle for his daughter – a battle which began privately and ended
publicly. It is the story of what happened when David Mason, a private
family man, took on one of the UK’s largest corporations and clung
on doggedly as his own legal team and other parents of Thalidomide
babies turned against him – until he won. For the measure of the
final success of the Thalidomide campaign was not just the immense
publicity it created, thanks in part to fearless journalism; rather it
was that, starting from an offer of compensation of £3.25 million,
the amount eventually awarded to the affected children exceeded £30
million. Thalidomide: My Fight is an inspiration to others who, when
finding themselves up against odds that look formidable, feel like
giving in. The book is a striking record of how a human tragedy, faced
with courage, brought about a private fight for justice that ended as
a public crusade. In an era of ‘David and Goliath’ battles such as
the Post Office Horizon Scandal and the Corby Toxic Waste Scandal this
account remains as powerful and pertinent now as when it was first
published.
Les mer
My Fight
Produktdetaljer
ISBN
9781040906941
Publisert
2026
Utgave
1. utgave
Utgiver
Taylor & Francis
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Digital bok
Forfatter