"...but how many people now think about ... thalidomide victims?"
Sorry that this is rather off-topic. My parents married in 1961, the same year that thalidomide was banned in the UK.
If my mum had got pregnant even a year or two earlier then she may well have been prescribed thalidomide. I could have had an elder sibling who was a thalidomide victim.
Growing up as a child, a shortened version of that word was often used as a term of abuse (much in the same way that the old word for a person with cerebral palsy was used as a term of abuse).
Back then I really didn't understand what it meant other than that it was a term of abuse. It was only many years later that I understood the full horror.
If anyone is unaware of what thalidomide does to unborn children, please - do not search online, the images you see cannot be unseen.
Although, I do remember about twenty years ago being in hospital with my daughter when she was young (I was well into my 30s when I gave birth). I remember chatting with one of the doctors and they mentioned prescribing thalidomide for something.
I remember that I exploded. "What the f**k do you think you're doing giving thalidomide to a woman?". They explained why it was given and that there are now very tight controls to ensure it is not given to a woman who might possibly be pregnant.
But, to answer your question:
"...but how many people now think about ... thalidomide victims?"
Some of us older people certainly do.