February 2010

You are browsing the archive for February 2010.

Toyota Avoided 2008 Minivan Recall with Traffic Safety Agency’s Knowledge

In 2008, the National Highway Traffic Safety Agency allowed Toyota to dodge a recall of Sienna minivans linked by U.S. regulators to at least 98 injuries, Bloomberg reports: Instead of issuing a recall under the U.S. Safety Act, Toyota sent letters to owners of 196,222 Sienna vans offering to replace struts on the liftgates as ... Read more »

Justice Department: Cardiac Device Maker Failed to Report Safety Problems

A medical device manufacturer owned by Boston Scientific was charged Thursday with failing to report safety problems with some of its implantable defibrillators, lifesaving devices used to detect and treat heart rhythm abnormalities. The Justice Department filed criminal charges following a four-year inquiry into the subsidiary Guidant that alleges the company knew about problems with ... Read more »

Kansas Set to Ban Smoking in Public Places

Kansas is set to become the 28th state to ban smoking in most public places. The bill cleared the legislature Thursday and now goes to Gov. Mark Parkinson, who has promised to sign it into law. Once signed, the ban goes into effect July 1. From the Kansas City Star: All restaurants, bars and workplaces ... Read more »

Do Toxins Cause Autism?

Autism was first identified in 1943 in an obscure medical journal. Since then it has become a frighteningly common affliction, with the Centers for Disease Control reporting recently that autism disorders now affect almost 1 percent of children.

Florida Judge Shaves Tobacco Verdict to $39 Million

A judge in Fort Lauderdale reduced a $300 million verdict against cigarette maker Philip Morris to $39 million. Last year, a jury awarded Cindy Naugle, a former Benson & Hedges smoker with emphysema, $244 million in punitive and $56.6 million in compensatory damages. In cutting the award, state court judge Jeffrey Streitfeld said it was ... Read more »

State Audit: Fraud in California Smog Tests

Smog check stations are under scrutiny after a study by the California Air Resources Board found extensive fraud among smog check results in the state. Between 2000 and 2006, the California Highway Patrol and the Bureau of Automotive Repair randomly inspected 6,000 older cars that had been cleared by smog check centers within the past ... Read more »

Prosecutors Charge Scheme to Sell Tainted Tomatoes

The New York Times reports on widespread corruption in food-buying practices at major companies like Safeway, Kraft and Frito-Lay. The article focuses on evidence in the trial of Frederick Scott Salyer, owner of California-based tomato processor SK Foods. From the article: The scheme, as laid out by federal prosecutors, has two parts. Officials say that Mr. Salyer ... Read more »

Study: 48,000 Died From Hospital-Contracted Infections in 2006

An alarming new study estimates that about 48,000 Americans died of infections contracted in hospitals in 2006. The study also found that pneumonia and sepsis infections contracted by patients cost about $8 billion in extra medical bills that year alone. The study, published in the Feb. 22 issue of Archives of Internal Medicine, looked at ... Read more »

EPA Orders Safety Changes at SF Meat Processor

A meat processor in South San Francisco must address a number of safety concerns after its accidental release of a hazardous chemical last year left 17 people hospitalized, the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency announced. Columbus Manufacturing released about 200 pounds of anhydrous ammonia in August 2009, according to the EPA. Exposure to the gas can ... Read more »

Doctor, GSK Battle Over Diabetes Drug Safety

The New York Times has a story with a rare insider’s look at a skirmish between an Ohio cardiologist and GlaxoSmithKline over the best-selling diabetes drug Avandia. Dr. Steven E. Nissen conducted a landmark study suggesting Avandia, made by GlaxoSmithKline, raised the risk of heart attacks. The study, published three years ago, prompted a Congressional ... Read more »