Wyeth Paid Ghostwriters to Minimize Drug’s Breast Cancer Threat, Study Says
By Patrick Corcoran">Patrick Corcoran on September 9, 2010
A new study has elaborated on how the pharmaceutical company Wyeth allegedly paid a team of ghostwriters to write medical journal articles that minimized a dangerous potential side effect — ... Read more »
Posted in News & Notes, Pharmaceutical Industry | Leave a comment
Chemicals in Non-Stick Cookware Linked to High Cholesterol in Kids
By Jessica Roberts">Jessica Roberts on September 9, 2010
A new study has linked chemicals used to make non-stick cookware and waterproof and stain-resistant fabrics to higher cholesterol levels in young children and teens, according to WebMD Health News.
The study tested ... Read more »
Posted in News & Notes, Product Hazards and Recalls | Leave a comment
After 9/11, Communication Between Emergency Crews Still Slow and Difficult
By Patrick Corcoran">Patrick Corcoran on September 9, 2010
One of the most glaring deficiencies in the federal emergency response on 9/11 remains an enormous problem, The New York Times reports.
The federal government has spent more than $7 billion in ... Read more »
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Unsafe at Any Meal
By Eric Schlosser on July 26, 2010
EVERY day, about 200,000 Americans are sickened by contaminated food. Every year, about 325,000 are hospitalized by a food-borne illness. And the number who are killed annually by something they ate is roughly the same as the number of Americans who’ve been killed in Iraq and Afghanistan since 2003.
Those estimates, from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, suggest the scale of the problem. But they fail to convey the human toll. The elderly and people with compromised immune systems face an elevated risk from food-borne pathogens like listeria, campylobacter and salmonella. By far the most vulnerable group, however, are children under the age of 4. Our food will never be perfectly safe — and yet if the Senate fails to pass the food safety legislation now awaiting a vote, tens of thousands of American children will become needlessly and sometimes fatally ill.
Almost one year ago, the House of Representatives passed the Food Safety Enhancement Act with bipartisan support. A similar bill, the F.D.A. Food Safety Modernization Act, was unanimously approved by the Senate Health, Education, Labor and Pensions Committee in November. This legislation would grant the Food and Drug Administration, which has oversight over 80 percent of the nation’s food, the authority to test widely for dangerous pathogens and improve the agency’s ability to trace outbreaks back to their source. Most important, it would finally give the agency the power to order the recall of contaminated foods — and to punish companies that knowingly sell them.
Read the entire article here.
Posted in Commentary