Short on Adderall? Blame DEA Production Caps
Each year, the DEA sets production limits for certain drugs, including some ingredients in common amphetamine pills like Adderall.

Early in the COVID-19 pandemic, prescriptions for Adderall, the stimulant medication used to treat attention deficit hyperactivity disorder (ADHD), skyrocketed. There were two main reasons. Due to social distancing, the Drug Enforcement Administration (DEA) allowed physicians to prescribe Schedule II controlled substances via telehealth appointments. And second, parents noticed that their children, suddenly relegated to Zoom schooling, were struggling to pay attention.
But easier access and more users were not the only culprits in the Adderall shortage that the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) officially recognized in October 2022. While the FDA blamed "manufacturing delays" at Teva Pharmaceuticals (the main source for both branded and generic versions of the drug), federal and state officials also played a major role.
Each year, the DEA sets production limits for the ingredients of Schedule I and II drugs, and manufacturers apply for pieces of the quotas. Total production of a drug cannot exceed the DEA's ceiling.
The DEA says it determines the quotas based on the amount that is annually prescribed. But even after the FDA reported a shortage, the DEA kept the 2022 levels intact in its 2023 quotas for Adderall's ingredients: dextroamphetamine saccharate, amphetamine aspartate, dextroamphetamine sulfate, and amphetamine sulfate.
Government-backed lawsuits that blamed pharmaceutical distributors for contributing to opioid abuse and deaths created another kink in the stimulant supply chain. After the three largest distributors and Johnson & Johnson reached a $26 billion settlement with state and local governments in February 2022, Reuters reported, the companies began cracking down on what they deemed suspicious orders from independent pharmacies. When pharmacies dispensed stimulants such as Adderall and sedatives such as Xanax to the same patient, for example, the distributors saw a red flag.
These pharmacies were filling prescriptions written by licensed physicians, and psychiatrists told Reuters there are legitimate reasons to prescribe both types of drugs to the same patient, whether to treat comorbidities or to control side effects. The distributors nevertheless cut off multiple independent pharmacies from all controlled substances in order to placate law enforcement. The blackballed pharmacists noted that large chains like CVS and Walgreens, which dispensed far more opioids over the years, went untouched.
The DEA claims as much as a third of American college students use Adderall without a prescription. But limiting the legal supply has the side effect of making it more difficult for students and employees to get the medications to help them focus.
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Maybe, just maybe, ADHD is way over diagnosed, and we don't need anywhere as much Adderall as claimed. Somehow we went for centuries, millennia without ADHD being a problem. Then, in the 80s and 90s, somehow, with the advent of a drug someone makes money off, it's suddenly a big problem? Maybe we might do better if we treated boys as boys in school, let them run around during recess, and got them off drugs.
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I am leaning toward thinking the same thing. My wife and I were called to school one time to discuss my son’s presumed ADHD. She had us watch our son in the classroom, which had desks on either side of a grass-like carpet. As we watched, he got out of his desk and joined a couple of other children–they were all around 8 years old–and he seemed a bit more energetic. But isn’t such an observation a bit too subjective to make a decision like that, to prescribe from him Adderall?
We never got around to prescribing it, and I’m glad we didn't. He’s 40 years old now, and one of the happiest people I know. He doesn’t seem to have a problem with concentration. I don't think he did. He was simply not interested in school. When he wants to know something that requires he do some research, he gets it done.
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"But isn’t such an observation a bit too subjective to make a decision like that, to prescribe from him Adderall?"
Absolutely too subjective. An ADHD diagnosis for any age, but espeically an eight-year-old, should be comprehensive. And even after a positive ADHD, Adderall isn't necessarily the right treatment.
Maybe we might do better if we treated boys as boys in school
^This right here. The prevailing mindset of the geniuses in education seems to be that young boys are just defective girls; they don't learn certain things as quickly at a young age, require more free play and exercise, generally respond to criticism in different ways, and are more competitive than collaborative in group settings.
Teachers and administrators seem to believe that these tendencies are bad and need to be quashed, rather than recognizing that most of it is nature and just needs to be directed properly. The solution, apparently, is to either break them early or pump them full of drugs.
"Maybe, just maybe, ADHD is way over diagnosed, and we don’t need anywhere as much Adderall as claimed."
Maybe, but whether that is true or not, it shouldn't be the DEA making that determination.
Bingo.
ADHD doesn't matter if you do manual labor. It's actually a benefit in manual labor, because you have an easier time going off into lala land while you're body goes on auto pilot.
With my diagnosis of ADHD in my senior year of college, we found out that most of my family has it. But the diagnosis only really matters for those of us in white collar jobs that take a lot of concentration on boring tasks. The family members in construction, painting, and welding are fine without meds, because they can concentrate on the things they need to and ignore the things they don't.
That said, ADHD really shouldn't be diagnosed until high-school. Before then, it's impossible to tell from normal kid behavior.
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Maybe, just maybe, ADHD is way over diagnosed
Also 'maybe, just maybe' the public school system is chock full of some of the most vile, toxic, abjectly inhuman personalities that even boys without ADHD *should* be lashing out at.
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>>parents noticed ... their children ... were struggling to pay attention
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Good! Kids should not be placed on meth!
Fix the schools and stop treating boys as toxic and they won’t need Adderall.
Fix the schools and stop treating boys as toxic and they won’t need Adderall.
If you thought giving meth to the boys was cruel, wait until you see what they're doing to the girls!
I agree. I cannot fill my prescription at any of the pharmacies in the 4 towns around me.