A_Cup_Of_Tea,_A_Bex_and_A_Good_Lie_Down
Bex was a strong compound analgesic which was popular in Australia for much of the 20th century. It came in the form of APC (aspirin–phenacetin–caffeine) tablets or powder, containing 42% aspirin and 42% phenacetin plus caffeine.[1]
Bex was a product of Beckers Pty Ltd, originally based at Pym Street, Dudley Park, South Australia,[2] but which relocated to Sydney in the 1960s.[3] It was advertised with the phrase, "Stressful Day? What you need is a cup of tea, a Bex and a good lie down".[4] Bex powders, as well as other APC products such as Vincent's, were particularly seen as the housewife's drug of choice in the 1950s and 1960s. However, it became recognised that these medications were addictive, and Priscilla Kincaid-Smith found that the large doses of phenacetin ingested by habitual users were responsible for widespread kidney disease.[4][5] The phenacetin was removed from Bex in 1975.[6] Bex has also been linked to kidney cancer.[7]