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Steve Bechler
Steve Bechler
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Steven Scott Bechler (November 18, 1979 – February 17, 2003) was an American professional baseball pitcher who played in Major League Baseball (MLB) for the Baltimore Orioles.

Key Information

After starring for the South Medford High School baseball team, Bechler was selected by the Orioles in the third round of the 1998 MLB draft. Following five seasons in Minor League Baseball, Bechler made his major league debut with the Orioles in 2002.

During spring training in 2003, he died of heat stroke while participating in conditioning drills. A medical examiner found that Bechler's use of the supplement ephedra contributed to his death. Following this revelation, the Food and Drug Administration opened an inquiry, which resulted in the banning of ephedra products in the United States. He and Tom Gastall are the only two Orioles to die while still active players.[1]

Early life

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Bechler was born on November 18, 1979, in Medford, Oregon, to Ernest and Patricia Bechler. He had one brother.[2] At the age of seven, he began playing baseball.[3] As a youth, he competed in the Medford American Little League, Babe Ruth League, and American Legion Baseball.[2] He was a member of the 1997 American Legion World Series runners-up.[4] Bechler had asthma as a child, and endured multiple episodes of heat stroke while in high school.[5]

Baseball career

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Bechler attended South Medford High School in Medford, Oregon. He graduated in 1998.[2] Playing for the school's baseball team, he was named to the All-Oregon third team in his senior year.[6]

Heading into the 1998 Major League Baseball draft, Baseball America rated Bechler the best high school prospect from the state of Oregon.[7] The Baltimore Orioles selected him in the third round draft.[4] Bechler signed with the Orioles, receiving a $257,000 signing bonus. He made his professional debut in Minor League Baseball with the Gulf Coast Orioles of the Rookie-level Gulf Coast League that year.[8] He pitched for the Delmarva Shorebirds of the Single-A South Atlantic League in 1999, and for the Frederick Keys of the High-A Carolina League in 2000.[9] In 2001, he pitched for Frederick, and was named a Carolina League All-Star. He did not appear in the All-Star Game, as he was promoted to the Rochester Red Wings of the Triple-A International League.[10] After struggling in two outings for Rochester, he was demoted to the Bowie Baysox of the Double-A Eastern League, where he remained for the rest of the season. After the 2001 season, the Orioles assigned Bechler to the Maryvale Saguaros of the Arizona Fall League.[11] The Orioles added Bechler to their 40-man roster to protect him from being eligible in the Rule 5 draft.[12]

In 2002, Bechler pitched for Bowie and Rochester. He had a 2–1 win–loss record with a 3.42 earned run average (ERA) with Bowie and 6–11 record and a 4.09 ERA with Rochester.[13] At the end of the minor league season, the Orioles promoted Bechler to the major leagues.[4][13] He appeared in three games for the Orioles, pitching 4+23 innings, in which he allowed six hits, four walks, three home runs, and recorded three strikeouts.[14] He suffered a strained hamstring in his final appearance.[15]

Personal life

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On October 22, 2002, Bechler married Kiley Mae Nixon at Community Bible Church in Central Point, Oregon.[2] The couple had a daughter, Hallie, who was born in April 2003, two months after her father's death.[3][16]

Death

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On February 16, 2003, during the Orioles' spring training camp in Fort Lauderdale, Florida, Bechler collapsed while participating in conditioning drills. He was rushed to a nearby hospital, where he died from multiple organ failure the following morning, at the age of 23.[1][17] His body temperature had reached 108 °F (42 °C).[18] Against the advice of his trainer, he was taking ephedra; at the time, it was reported that he had been taking it to lose weight, though his widow said in 2020 that he had been using it as an energy supplement.[1][19] While it was also initially reported that Bechler had not eaten for a day or two before his collapse, teammate Matt Riley later recalled that Bechler had gone to dinner with teammates the night before, though he ate very little.[1][20] However, Bechler did not consume anything aside from ephedra pills on the morning of February 16, possibly because he was running late.[1]

An autopsy performed by Broward County Medical Examiner Joshua Perper concluded that Bechler's death was caused by a pre-existing liver condition, mild hypertension, his weight (he weighed 249 pounds (113 kg) upon arriving at spring training, and was exercising hard), the heat and humidity of the Florida weather, low food consumption, and the toxicity of ephedra.[1][21]

At the time of Bechler's death, ephedra was banned by the International Olympic Committee, the National Collegiate Athletic Association, and the National Football League, but not by Major League Baseball, where its use remained common among players.[1][5] Bud Selig, the Commissioner of Baseball, called for a ban in the wake of Bechler's death.[22] Numerous teams banned the use of ephedra in their clubhouses.[23] The Food and Drug Administration, which had previously chosen not to ban ephedra, subsequently re-opened its efforts to regulate it. The United States Congress dropped its previous objections to a ban, and Bechler's parents testified in front of Congress.[18] The FDA announced its decision to ban ephedra on December 30.[24]

Bechler was cremated, and on the six month anniversary of his death his wife, Kiley Mae Nixon, scattered his ashes on the pitcher's mound of Oriole Park at Camden Yards.[16] She filed a wrongful death claim against Nutraquest, the manufacturers of the supplement, seeking $600 million in damages.[25][26] The lawsuit against Nutraquest was suspended in October 2003 when the company filed for bankruptcy under Chapter 11 of the United States Code.[27] Bechler's parents started The Steve Bechler Athletic Scholarship in his memory, which provides $1,000 annually to a graduating South Medford High School baseball or softball player who intends to compete in college.[1]

See also

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References

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Revisions and contributorsEdit on WikipediaRead on Wikipedia
from Grokipedia
Steven Scott Bechler (November 18, 1979 – February 17, 2003) was an American professional baseball pitcher who appeared in three games for the in 2002. Drafted by the Orioles in the third round of the 1998 MLB Draft out of South Medford High School in , Bechler progressed through the as a right-handed starter known for his potential but inconsistent command. His major league debut came on September 6, 2002, where he posted an 0-1 record with a 13.50 over 4 . Bechler's career was cut short when he collapsed during a workout on February 16, 2003, in , and died the following day at age 23 from multi-organ failure due to acute heatstroke, with his core body temperature reaching 108°F (42°C). The Broward County medical examiner, Joshua Perper, ruled heatstroke as the primary cause but determined that ephedra, a in the weight-loss supplement Xenadrine EFX that Bechler had been using to reduce body fat, contributed significantly by exacerbating his susceptibility to overheating and . This tragedy drew national attention to the risks of ephedrine alkaloids in sports supplements, influencing Major League Baseball's policy changes and contributing to the U.S. and Drug Administration's 2004 ban on ephedra sales.

Early Life

Family Background and Upbringing

Steven Scott Bechler was born on November 18, 1979, in , to parents Ernie and Pat Bechler, who were natives and had married in 1976. The family included an older brother, Mike, born in 1976, and a half-brother, Ernie Jr., who died at age 20 from a brain aneurysm. Ernie Bechler worked in a mill until becoming disabled, while Pat Bechler served as a supervisor at for nearly 25 years, reflecting a modest, working-class household in the region. Bechler grew up in Medford, a community with a strong affinity for , amid family circumstances marked by both support for athletics and personal tragedy from the loss of Ernie Jr.. His parents were deeply involved in their sons' activities, often coaching and attending events, which instilled a competitive drive through with Mike and exposure to the sport via local influences. From an early age, Bechler displayed an innate interest in , learning skills like the from friends of his brother and competing against older peers, which honed his abilities in a setting where sports offered a prominent avenue for advancement in a blue-collar environment devoid of professional athletic lineage. The family shared fandom for teams like the Dodgers, attended minor league games of the , and nurtured his aspirations, such as dreaming of meeting former Orioles catcher .

High School Baseball and Draft

Steven Scott Bechler excelled as a right-handed for the South Medford High School Panthers in . During his junior year in 1997, he secured first-team All-Conference honors and honorable mention All-State recognition for his mound work. In a marquee matchup against Ashland High School, Bechler delivered a one-hitter with 17 s, outdueling future major league Jeremy in a victory that underscored his strikeout prowess. As a senior in 1998, Bechler earned third-team All-Oregon honors, capping a high school career marked by raw power and dominance in state-level competitions. That summer, playing for the Medford Mustangs, he posted a 12-4 record with 152 strikeouts across 124 innings pitched, helping his team reach the World Series finals. There, Bechler claimed the Pitching Award for leading the tournament in strikeouts, further highlighting his ability to miss bats with velocity and breaking stuff. Orioles scout John Gillette first observed the lanky 6-foot-2, 180-pound senior, praising his projectable frame and arm strength as key attributes, even as command required development. These traits positioned Bechler as a prospect with upside, emphasizing physical tools over polish. The selected Bechler in the third round (99th overall) of the 1998 MLB June amateur draft out of South Medford High School. He signed with the organization three days later on June 5, 1998, for a of $257,000, a figure commensurate with his status as a high-upside high school arm rather than an immediate contributor. Post-signing, Bechler reported to the rookie-level Gulf Coast League in , marking his entry into professional baseball development.

Professional Baseball Career

Minor League Development

Drafted by the Baltimore Orioles in the third round (99th overall) of the out of South Medford High School in , Steve Bechler signed with the organization and began his professional career in the rookie-level Gulf Coast League (GCL) Orioles that year. In nine starts, he recorded a 2-4 record with a 2.72 over 56 innings, allowing 39 strikeouts against just 8 walks, demonstrating early promise as a power arm with a that reached 95 mph. Bechler advanced to Single-A Delmarva Shorebirds in 1999, where he made 26 starts, posting an 8-12 record and 3.54 across 152⅓ with 139 strikeouts, finishing second on the in , strikeouts, and . The following year at Frederick Keys, he logged 162 in 27 starts (8-12, 4.83 , 137 strikeouts), showcasing durability but struggling with consistency and command under pressure, as noted by manager Dave Machemer. In 2001, Bechler split time across levels—starting strongly at Frederick (5-2, 2.27 in 8 starts), then moving to Double-A Bowie Baysox (3-5, 3.08 in 12 starts, impressing pitching coach Tom Burgmeier as a "bulldog-type guy") and briefly Triple-A —ending with a 9-8 record overall and highlights including an undefeated May and a 10-strikeout performance against Lynchburg on 8. Added to ' 40-man roster after the 2001 season, Bechler returned to Double-A Bowie in 2002 (2-1, 3.42 in limited action) before promotion to Triple-A Rochester, where he went 6-11 with a 4.53 in 22 starts, including a nine-inning against Scranton/Wilkes-Barre on July 21 with 9 strikeouts. Despite organizational recognition of his power pitching potential—featuring a mid-90s and sharp —persistent challenges with control, emotional control early in outings, and late-season fatigue led to repeated adjustments between levels and underwhelming win-loss records, though he showed late improvement with a 3.21 in his final 15 Rochester starts. Coaches emphasized offseason conditioning to address weight fluctuations affecting stamina, contributing to his September 2002 major league call-up after five seasons.

Major League Appearances and Performance

Bechler made his debut on September 6, 2002, with the Baltimore Orioles, appearing in against the Anaheim Angels at Camden Yards. In total, he pitched in three games that September, all in short outings, logging 4.2 innings with a 13.50 , allowing 6 hits, 7 earned runs (including 1 ), 3 walks, and 3 strikeouts. His final appearance came on September 22, 2002, after which a injury sidelined him for the remainder of the season. Performance metrics highlighted command issues, with walks matching strikeouts in limited action, and a of 2.14 reflecting frequent baserunners. Scouting evaluations noted his velocity at 91-94 mph with potential for higher, paired with a strong knuckle-curve , but Bechler's listed weight of 207 pounds—often exceeded in reality—contributed to dips in velocity and endurance, limiting effectiveness against major league hitters. Despite entering as the Orioles' 15th-ranked prospect with promising physical tools, these struggles underscored an unfulfilled trajectory, as he failed to secure a roster spot post-season.

Health and Supplement Use

Weight Struggles and Fitness Efforts

Steve Bechler, standing 6 feet 2 inches tall, began his career after being drafted in 1998 at approximately 180 pounds but subsequently gained significant weight, reaching over 240 pounds in subsequent years. This chronic overweight condition persisted throughout his five-year tenure, with team media guides listing him at 239 pounds and actual weigh-ins confirming higher figures, such as 249 pounds upon reporting to 2003 . The excess weight adversely affected his stamina and recovery between pitches and games, as evidenced by teammate accounts noting diminished during extended outings despite his ability to pitch substantial . To combat these issues, Bechler undertook fitness efforts during off-seasons and training camps, including participation in team-organized workouts in , though attendance was sporadic, averaging roughly one session per week in a month-long voluntary program prior to the season. In , he focused on conditioning drills to slim down, aiming to reduce body fat through diet and exercise regimens prescribed by coaches. However, these initiatives yielded mixed results, with instances of temporary body fat reduction accompanied by overall weight gains of 10 to 15 pounds between seasons, underscoring challenges in sustaining progress. Team observations highlighted causal connections between Bechler's and impaired physical conditioning, including reports of fatty liver noted in medical evaluations, which compounded reduced aerobic capacity and recovery times essential for pitching performance. Coaches and peers emphasized the need for consistent motivation, with one teammate stating that Bechler "had to be pushed" to exercise regularly outside of mandatory team activities. Despite occasional durability in logging high totals in the minors, such as 162 innings in 2000, the persistent weight struggles limited his overall athletic output and prospect trajectory.

Ephedra Consumption and Known Risks

Bechler consumed Xenadrine RFA-1, an over-the-counter dietary supplement containing ephedra alkaloids derived from the ma huang plant (Ephedra sinica), primarily to accelerate weight loss and enhance physical conditioning amid pressures to meet Major League Baseball's body composition standards for pitchers. He reportedly ingested three capsules each morning, exceeding the manufacturer's recommended dosage of two capsules twice daily, with each capsule delivering approximately 12.5 mg of ephedrine alkaloids alongside caffeine and other stimulants marketed for thermogenic effects to boost metabolism and fat oxidation. This usage aligned with ephedra's promotion in the early 2000s as a performance aid for athletes seeking rapid body fat reduction without compromising muscle mass, though Bechler's regimen reflected self-directed escalation beyond label guidelines to address his persistent struggles with excess weight impacting stamina and velocity. Ephedra alkaloids, principally , function as sympathomimetics by stimulating alpha- and beta-adrenergic receptors, thereby elevating , , and core body temperature to facilitate short-term energy expenditure and appetite suppression. Pre-2004 FDA ban, these products were consumed by an estimated 12 million Americans annually, generating over $1 billion in sales, with empirical data indicating modest efficacy for —averaging 0.9 kg more than over several months in meta-analyses of controlled trials—particularly when combined with diet and exercise. However, physiological risks included dose-dependent elevations in systolic (up to 7 mmHg) and (up to 4 beats per minute), alongside potential for due to impaired heat dissipation, as documented in pharmacodynamic studies on healthy adults. Adverse event surveillance by the FDA prior to the ban logged approximately 16,000 reports, encompassing over 100 deaths temporally linked to ephedra use, though these were predominantly voluntary submissions lacking mandatory causation verification and drawn from a vast user base where serious incidents represented a fraction of 1% incidence. Clinical reviews emphasized that while ephedrine could precipitate arrhythmias or cerebrovascular events in susceptible individuals—such as those with underlying hypertension or dehydration—controlled trials in normotensive subjects often showed no excess risk at doses under 24 mg/day, supporting arguments from pharmacologists that benefits for weight management in otherwise healthy users outweighed hazards when adhering to conservative protocols absent polydrug interactions. This context underscored ephedra's narrow therapeutic window, where individual variability in metabolism and environmental stressors like Florida's humid training conditions amplified vulnerabilities despite population-level tolerability.

Death and Immediate Aftermath

Spring Training Collapse

On February 17, 2003, Steve Bechler, a 23-year-old pitching prospect for the Baltimore Orioles, collapsed during an optional conditioning workout at the team's facility in . The workout involved running drills, including a half-mile run, under conditions of 81°F temperature and 74% humidity, which created a equivalent to approximately 85°F. Bechler had arrived in only days earlier for the start of , without prior acclimation to the subtropical climate, and eyewitness accounts noted his evident struggle and poor physical conditioning during the session. Midway through the drills, Bechler fell to the ground, exhibiting signs of severe distress including vomiting; teammates and staff immediately attended to him before he was transported by to North Ridge Medical Center. Upon arrival, his core body temperature was measured at 108°F, indicative of acute heatstroke. Despite medical interventions, Bechler succumbed to multi-system organ failure from the heatstroke later that day. The incident occurred during what was described as a voluntary early-morning session, following similar drills the previous day that Bechler had completed without issue.

Autopsy Findings and Contributing Factors

The autopsy conducted by Broward County Medical Examiner Joshua Perper on February 18, 2003, determined that Steve Bechler died from complications of heatstroke, which elevated his core body temperature to 108°F (42°C) and led to multi-organ failure. Toxicology results confirmed the presence of ephedrine alkaloids from ephedra at significant levels consistent with recent consumption of the supplement Xenadrine RFA-1 (approximately three tablets), which Perper identified as a contributing factor by exacerbating the body's heat retention and cardiovascular stress, though not at overdose concentrations sufficient to cause death independently. No alcohol, illicit drugs, or other stimulants were detected in the toxicology screen. Additional pathological findings included (Bechler weighed 238 pounds at 6 feet 1 inch), an enlarged heart (), borderline , and with abnormal enzyme levels, all of which Perper noted as synergistic vulnerabilities that impaired and increased susceptibility to heatstroke during the humid spring training conditions in . Dehydration was evident from the physiological context of exertional heatstroke, though not quantified separately beyond the organ failure patterns. While Perper emphasized ephedra's role in the multifactorial causality, some contemporaneous medical analyses, including reviews of the data, prioritized exertional as the proximate trigger—driven by environmental heat, physical exertion, and pre-existing conditions—with ephedra acting secondarily by mildly elevating metabolic rate and rather than as a dominant agent. These interpretations aligned with physiological evidence that ephedrine levels in Bechler's system ( at 0.12 mg/L and at trace amounts post-metabolism) were below thresholds reported in prior case studies, underscoring the interplay of individual risk factors over isolated supplement effects.

Controversies Surrounding Ephedra

Medical and Scientific Debates on Causality

The Broward County , Joshua Perper, concluded in the March 2003 autopsy report that toxicity from Bechler's consumption of Xenadrine RFA-1 significantly contributed to his heatstroke death by exacerbating cardiovascular strain and impairing the body's thermoregulatory response through and elevated . levels in Bechler's system measured 0.12 micrograms per milliliter, below acute overdose thresholds but sufficient, per Perper, to interact adversely with environmental heat (temperature exceeding 90°F/32°C), , and physical exertion, as sympathomimetic effects reduce peripheral blood flow needed for cooling. Supporting this view, a 2000 Journal of Medicine analysis of 140 adverse events linked ephedra alkaloids—often combined with —to increased risks of , arrhythmias, and , attributing to dose-dependent sympathetic overstimulation in vulnerable individuals. Conversely, toxicologists and pharmacologists critiqued the attribution of primary causality to ephedra, emphasizing multifactorial etiology in exertional , including Bechler's (over 240 pounds/109 kg), inadequate to Florida's spring , and possible underlying and liver dysfunction noted in pre-death records. Experts like those in circles argued Perper's preliminary linkage—issued before full —overstated ephedra's role, as heatstroke fatalities occur independently in athletes via core temperature surges above 104°F/40°C from alone, with ephedrine's presence not proving singular causation amid variables like fluid loss and metabolic variability. A 2003 military medicine case report on ephedra-associated heatstroke in a similarly highlighted predisposing factors (e.g., poor fitness, high ambient ) over direct , noting no ergogenic benefits from ephedra to justify risks. Empirical data underscores rarity: pre-2003 FDA surveillance reported approximately 16,000 ephedra-related complaints from millions of users (estimated 12-17 million annually in the U.S.), with serious cardiovascular or -related events comprising less than 1% of cases, per industry analyses and NIH-commissioned reviews finding insufficient for population-level beyond susceptible subgroups. Critics of amplified risk narratives, including pharmacologists, invoked individual metabolic differences—such as enzyme variations affecting clearance—as key to why adverse outcomes manifest idiosyncratically rather than predictably, challenging deterministic causal claims absent controlled trials isolating ephedra from stress. This reflects broader tensions, with FDA-cited mechanisms validated (e.g., -induced ) but population studies showing low incidence rates (e.g., 2-3 events per 100,000 users annually for severe outcomes), prioritizing personal physiological thresholds over blanket prohibitions.

Regulatory Ban and Industry Impact

The U.S. (FDA) finalized its ban on dietary supplements containing alkaloids on 11, 2004, deeming them adulterated under the Federal Food, Drug, and Cosmetic Act, with enforcement beginning April 12, 2004. The agency cited more than 16,000 reports since 1995, including at least 155 deaths linked to ephedra use, with Bechler's 2003 death serving as a prominent catalyst that intensified public and congressional scrutiny. This federal action followed Major League Baseball's voluntary prohibition of -based products in systems, implemented on 24, 2003, in direct response to Bechler's collapse during . The ban triggered immediate economic disruption in the dietary supplement sector, part of a $16 billion industry in 2004, as ephedra products—marketed for and performance enhancement—were abruptly removed from legal sales channels, evaporating billions in annual revenue. Manufacturers encountered cascading lawsuits and financial strain; for instance, Bechler's widow filed a $600 million in July 2003 against NutraQuest (producer of Xenadrine RFA-1, the ephedra supplement Bechler consumed), leading the company to file for Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection in October 2003 to restructure amid multiple ephedra-related liabilities. NutraQuest also countersued the Orioles, alleging team oversight contributed to Bechler's condition, though the case highlighted broader litigation pressures on producers. Some industry advocates and legal challenges framed the ban as regulatory overreach, emphasizing ephedra's historical use in (as ma huang) for millennia without widespread harm when dosed appropriately, and arguing insufficient evidence of population-level risk justified outright . A U.S. District Court in struck down the ban's applicability to low-dose ephedra supplements (under 10 mg ephedrine alkaloids per serving) on , 2005, ruling the FDA failed to prove "unreasonable risk" under the Health and Education Act, though higher-dose products remained restricted and the decision was partially appealed. Post-ban, ephedrine alkaloids evaded full eradication via black-market channels and adulterated imports, with FDA detections persisting; warning letters for undeclared ephedra in supplements continued into 2022, indicating incomplete enforcement.

Criticisms of Overregulation and Personal Responsibility

Critics of the FDA's 2004 ephedra ban, finalized following Steve Bechler's death, argued that it exemplified overregulation by prioritizing rare adverse events over a balanced risk-utility assessment, particularly when ephedra had demonstrated modest efficacy for short-term in clinical trials. A 2003 meta-analysis of 19 randomized trials found that (a key ephedra ) promoted approximately 0.9 kg more per month than , with pooled data showing an average 11% body weight reduction over four months in some studies, suggesting tangible benefits for individuals when used appropriately. Proponents of this view, including industry analysts and free-market advocates, contended that the ban disregarded such evidence in favor of anecdotal cases, establishing a for anecdote-driven that eroded consumer access to supplements without adequate safer alternatives, such as unaddressed combinations like with other stimulants. In Bechler's specific case, emphasis was placed on individual agency and lapses in personal responsibility rather than inherent product danger, with reports highlighting his failure to acclimate to Florida's spring training heat, inadequate hydration despite coaching warnings, and unsupervised self-medication while overweight. Baltimore Orioles staff had advised players, including Bechler, to prioritize water intake during workouts in humid conditions, yet he collapsed after minimal exertion, underscoring dehydration and fitness deficits as primary contributors to his heatstroke, as echoed in analyses attributing the tragedy more to environmental unpreparedness than ephedra alone. The ban's critics further highlighted regulatory imbalance, noting that a federal court ruling struck it down initially, finding the FDA had arbitrarily minimized evidence of safety at low doses (under 10 mg per serving) and overstated risks without proving unreasonableness under the Dietary Supplement Health and Education Act (DSHEA). This decision reflected broader concerns that the policy ignored ephedra's role in aiding weight control for millions—evidenced by pre-ban showing widespread use for fitness goals—while imposing economic costs estimated in billions for the supplement industry and curtailing informed adult choices in favor of paternalistic intervention. Such arguments, often from libertarian-leaning think tanks and legal scholars, advocated for evidence-based thresholds over blanket prohibitions, warning of cascading scrutiny on other nutraceuticals with similar risk profiles.

References

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