May 2010

You are browsing the archive for May 2010.

ATV-Related Deaths Climb Over Memorial Day, Summer

Memorial Day weekend is among the deadliest times for all-terrain vehicle riders, with 27 fatalities recorded over the holiday last year, the U.S. Consumer Product Safety Commission warns. ATV-related deaths from March to April spike an average of 30 percent for children younger than 16 and 88 percent for adults, according to the CPSC. From 2003 ... Read more »

How Dangerous Are Everyday Chemicals, Really?

The New Yorker has an article up on its website, called “The Plastic Panic,” and it’s all about BPA, PCBs, pesticides, and other everyday chemicals deemed harmful by some. The question author Jerome Groopman poses is how harmful are these chemicals really, and how do we know? Groopman argues that the recent uproar over BPA, ... Read more »

OSHA Criticizes Job Safety at Theme Parks, Entertainment Venues

A top federal job safety regulator said he was putting theme parks and entertainment venues “on notice” after a series of worker injuries and deaths, including at Walt Disney World and SeaWorld Orlando. In a conference call with reporters, David Michaels, assistant secretary for the Occupational Safety and Health Administration, said “safety is often not considered ... Read more »

Worry Over Chemical Dispersant Intensifies

Anxiety surrounding the chemical dispersant used to battle the BP oil spill is rising, thanks in part to seven cleanup crew members who were admitted to a hospital with complaints of nausea, shortness of breath and high blood pressure. Doctors say the symptoms are related to some kind of irritant, as well as dehydration, according ... Read more »

Home Pools Pose Drowning Hazards for Kids

An average of 385 children younger than 15 drowned in a pool or spa in recent years, according to the U.S. Consumer Product Safety Commission. About three-quarters of the deaths from 2005 to 2007 occurred at a residence. In a report released this week, the CPSC said pool- or spa-related submersions sent 4,200 kids younger ... Read more »

Increased Tobacco Use Among Women Suggests More Female-Targeted Ads

Tobacco use is growing among females, suggesting they are also increasingly the target of cigarette advertising, according to an analysis of a global tobacco survey. The U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention and health officials in Bangladesh, Thailand and Uruguay examined how tobacco use and marketing awareness varied among males and females in 14 ... Read more »

FairWarining Reports

Epic Insurance Fraud Case Ends Meekly

A once massive criminal case charging a conspiracy to deny workers compensation benefits to employees of a packaging plant in Salinas, Calif., ended Thursday on a decidedly minor note when two former managers were sentenced to 30 days in jail. At that, Douglas Tateoka and David Polk, ex-managers with the Smurfit-Stone Container Corp., who had faced 109 felony counts ... Read more »

BP Oil Spill Largest in U.S. History

Two separate team of scientists have calculated a new estimate of the oil leaked into the Gulf of Mexico since April 20, and even their most conservative estimate makes it the largest spill in U.S. history. According to their findings, between 504,000 and more than 1 million gallons of oil per day have spilled into ... Read more »

Rarer Strains of E. coli Raise Concerns

For years, safety officials have focused on E. coli; the bacteria has killed hundreds of people and caused the recall of millions of pounds of hamburger meat, spinach and other foods. But officials have typically zeroed in on one particular strain — E. coli O157:H7.  Now, health experts are starting to worry about six other ... Read more »

EPA May Take Over Texas Air Regulation

Citing lax enforcement of clean air standards, the Environmental Protection Agency may take over air quality regulation in Texas, setting the stage for a battle over federal and state rights. The move comes a day after the EPA announced that it will issue the operating permit for an oil refinery in Corpus Christi and plans to take over ... Read more »