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Using Adderall In the Office To Get Ahead

HughPickens.com writes: The NY Times reports on the changing usage of psychostimulants like Adderall. They were once only prescribed to help children with attention deficit disorders focus on their school work, but then college students found those drugs could increase their ability to study. Now a growing number of workers use them to help compete. What will happen as these drugs are more widely used in the workplace? According to Anjan Chatterjee, the use of neurotechnologies to enhance healthy people's brain function could easily become widespread. "If anything, we worship workplace productivity by any means. Americans work longer hours and take fewer vacations than most others in the developed world. Why not add drugs to energize, focus and limit that annoying waste of time — sleep?" Julian Savulescu says that what defines human beings is their extraordinary cognitive power and their ability to enhance that power through reading, writing, computing and now smart drugs. "Eighty-five percent of Americans use caffeine. Nicotine and sugar are also cognitive enhancers," says Savulescu.

But cognitive neurologist Martha Farah says regular use on the job is an invitation to dependence. "I also worry about the effect of drug-fueled productivity on people other than the users," says Farah. "It is not hard to imagine a supervisor telling employees that this is the standard they should aspire to in their work, however they manage to do it (hint, hint). The eventual result will be a ratcheting up of "normal" productivity, where everyone uses (and the early adopters' advantage is only fleeting)."

7 of 407 comments (clear)

  1. Re:So what? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

    If there are few to no negative side effects, what does it matter if people lean on these drugs to work?

    I've not used them myself, but I don't care if others do.

    I would call chemical dependence, i.e. addiction, to be a pretty negative side effect. Wouldn't you?

    That's even ignoring the people, like one person in the article, who used these pills to cut down on sleep to about 3 hours per night for weeks on end and these magic pills do nothing to replace sleep. Getting in a car accident with one of these zombies sounds pretty negative to me too.

    Would you like some more negative effects? It's not exactly hard to find on Google.

  2. Working-man's drug by PopeRatzo · · Score: 5, Insightful

    If there is a drug that will make you more productive to your employer, it will be embraced and encouraged.

    If there's a drug that gives you pleasure, but doesn't bring a similar boost to a company's bottom line, it will get you sent to jail.

    Let's not pretend that adderall in the workplace isn't just more capitalist social engineering. They'll exploit you any way they can.

    --
    You are welcome on my lawn.
  3. Re:So what? by TWX · · Score: 5, Insightful

    In this case, the concern, which I think is fairly small but I can't deny that weirder things have happened, is that what's considered a normal, "meets expectations," level of productivity could be based on results obtained through the use of these grey-market or black-market drugs. This takes an already high-strung workforce and puts unreasonable expectations on them, such that more people may abuse these drugs and suffer the negative ramifications of them, who wouldn't otherwise be inclined to try them in the first place.

    I struggle enough with caffeine and the negative effects of trying to keep intake manageable that I can't imagine how bad an addictive substance with much worse withdrawal symptoms would be.

    --
    Do not look into laser with remaining eye.
  4. Re:So what? by cdwiegand · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Would you WANT, truly WANT, to work at a place like that? I wouldn't. If the rest of my office used Adderal or another drug to get ahead, I want to GET OUT. Not only will the place eventually bomb, but dependance is a bitch. I will find, or create, a job where that isn't tolerated. And it's not hard - yes there are plenty of places that "won't care, (wink) (wink)," but there will be plenty where professionalism is still King and it simply would not be tolerated at all, not even under the table.

    --
    . Define sqrt(x) as something really evil like (x / rand()), and bury it deep. Watch your coworkers go nuts.
  5. Re:So what? by ShanghaiBill · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Adderall is just taking it to the next level.

    Maybe. Maybe not. There are no controlled studies that show any productivity benefit to a normal person taking Adderall. Many people "feel" that they benefit, but many people also feel that homeopathy cures their illnesses. TFA seems to make the assumption that these drugs actually work, when there is no scientific evidence that they do.

  6. Re:So what? by spiritplumber · · Score: 5, Insightful
    Happened to me. Workgroup was 11 people, only me and one other guy were NOT on what amounts to amphetamines of various sorts.

    So, one day the team leader says "Hey, spiritplumber, you look tired."

    "Yeah, the work is exciting but I'm having a bit of a hard time keeping up."

    "I know what you should do."

    "Thanks, but I only need one Monday off to catch up on sleep."

    "No, nothing like that. Go to this one doctor and he'll give you a prescription no questions asked."

    "For what?"

    "Oh, you know, allergy medication. It's probably why you've been under the weather." (Winks, I miss it because I'm derp).

    "What's it called? I have" (herbal remedy) "for allergies."

    "ProCentra. Tell him you work here."

    So I go home, talk to my girlfriend who's a chem engie, and ask her what the hell that stuff is, so she tells me it's amphetamine. The next day, I explain to my team leader what my family does to people who get any of us into drugs, and quit. My father disapproves of the decision because he says I should also have punched the guy out after quitting.

    --
    Liberty - Security - Laziness - Pick any two.
  7. Re: So what? by Sardaukar86 · · Score: 5, Insightful

    I do not think people who rely on medication like Adderall or antidepressants should be allowed to drive.

    Wow, I found myself so annoyed by your post I wanted to reply with "Fuck you!" However that's hardly constructive, even if it is in character. (Yeah, I'm trying to evolve.)

    Anyway: some of us are productive, helpful, compassionate and useful members of society, but only when we take our medication on a regular basis. Typically we're not proud of that fact but it beats the alternative.

    If it helps you feel better: when some of us identified by this generalisation fail to take our medication - for whatever reason - we suffer a special kind of agony that cannot be described or explained adequately to someone who does not need medication to function normally. Consider it a significant punishment, if that eases your conscience. In my own experience I've found it can take weeks to fully return to normal.

    Would you feel as coldly towards a person suffering diabetes? A person who needs daily finger-prick blood testing and may even require insulin injections?

    We didn't get to choose our brains or our bodies, just like you didn't get to choose yours.

    Besides, if I had a choice I'd naturally rather be a unicorn, just like every other sane person out there.

    --
    ..Mullah or Pope, Preacher or Poet, who was it wrote: "Give any one species too much rope and they'll fuck it up"?