| | | | Nostrums and Patent Medicines | Pills, drops, salves and elixirs are all examples of quack nostrums which were particularly popular in 19th Century America. These medications were often dreamt up by laymen with no medical background whatsoever and marketed to the public as a pain free alternative to the bleedings and purgatives employed by physicians. | |  | While generic nostrums were distributed widely through drug stores, quacks would also sell them directly to consumers as so-called patent medicines. Advertisements for patent medicines would make outrageous claims about their efficacy with bogus testimonials as proof. In 1905 Samuel H. Adams wrote: “Gullible America will spend this year some seventy-five million dollars in the purchase of patent medicines.” This is approximately 1.6 billion dollars today. | Although called patent medicines, this term is a misnomer. American patent law required manufacturers to publish their ingredients, something quacks were not anxious to do. So more often the names of these medicines were simply trademarked, which allowed manufacturers to market a drug but change its composition for economic or legal reasons.
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