August 2010

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Investigators Find Widespread Violations at Egg Farms Linked to Salmonella

Federal authorities have found widespread food safety violations at the Iowa egg farms linked to the nation’s salmonella outbreak, discovering manure in piles up to 8 feet high, rodents, uncaged birds, rusty feed bins, maggots and dead flies “too numerous to count.” CNN reports that the findings were disclosed in Food and Drug Administration inspection ... Read more »

Flight Simulator Flaws Linked to Deadly Plane Crashes

Flight simulators are used to train the nation’s airline pilots, but flaws in simulator training may have contributed to some of the worst airline accidents and  more than half of crash fatalities in the past 10 years. According to a USA Today analysis, records from the National Transportation Safety Board show that, in rare cases, ... Read more »

Cancer Drug Cocktails Being Developed, With FDA Encouragement

In the 1990s, so-called drug cocktails produced major results in the treatment of AIDS. Now researchers are working a new generation of combination medicines to fight cancer. In response, U.S. drug regulators are rewriting the rules for drug approval to help usher in better treatments and cut development time Bloomberg Businessweek reports. Five years ago, ... Read more »

Tobacco Ads Blanket Poor Areas, But Curbs May Come

Cigarette advertising has been banished from the airwaves and from billboards. But, The Boston Globe reports, tobacco signs abound in the city’s low-income, minority neighborhoods — in storefront windows and even on light poles and gas pumps. A dozen years ago Massachusetts tried, unsuccessfully, to ban storefront tobacco ads near schools and playgrounds. Public health advocates ... Read more »

Concussions Sending More Young Athletes to Emergency Rooms

Young athletes are suffering more and more concussions while playing team sports.  A study published Monday in the journal Pediatrics reports that emergency room visits for concussions sustained in organized youth sports more than doubled from 2001 to 2005. And that sharp increase occurred even as participation in team athletics fell. The study is the first national ... Read more »

Families Question Safety of Drug Given to Veterans With PTSD

Over the past nine years, thousands of soldiers suffering from insomnia and nightmares related to post-traumatic stress disorder have been put on Seroquel, a potent antipsychotic that has become one of the Department of Veterans Affairs’ most prescribed drugs and the fifth best-selling drug in the nation. But several soldiers have died while taking Seroquel, and some families ... Read more »

Water Testing at California Beaches Takes a Dive

Water testing at California beaches has dramatically declined to its lowest level since state law mandated ocean monitoring just over a decade ago, putting beachgoers at greater risk for exposure to contaminated water, the Los Angeles Times reports. An analysis of state records found that the number of annual bacteria tests has dropped by nearly ... Read more »

Motor Vehicle Crashes Come With a $99 Billion Pricetag

Motor vehicle crashes cost the American public $99 billion a year in medical expenses and productivity losses, according to a new study by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. The CDC, in evaluating crash data and Americans’ average earnings for 2005, found that the economic toll of traffic injuries amounts to $500 for each ... Read more »

Weak Regulation Makes U.S. a Laggard in Auto Safety, Analysis Says

The U.S. has fallen behind other industrial nations in auto safety because of industry pressure and a failure to impose tough regulation, an article in the Journal of Public Health Policy argues. In 1966, the government established the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration  to reduce injuries and deaths by setting safety standards for cars and trucks and forcing ... Read more »

Record Verdict of $30 Million in “Popcorn Lung” Case

A Chicago jury has awarded a record $30.4 million to a worker who contracted a serious lung disease following exposure to diacetyl, a chemical ingredient of popcorn butter flavoring. It’s the largest verdict yet in a diacetyl case, and there are more than 300 others pending nationwide, Business Insurance reports. Gerardo Solis worked more than 17 years for several producers of ... Read more »