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Tuesday, February 7, 2012
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Browse: Home > News & Notes, Product Hazards and Recalls > Recall Rundown: Strollers, Deli Meat and Baby Monitors

Recall Rundown: Strollers, Deli Meat and Baby Monitors

on August 25, 2010

Lan Enterprises Recalls Zooper Tango Double Strollers Due to Collapse Hazard

Product Recall: CPSC, Circus World Displays Recalls Video Baby Monitors

Product Recall: Belle Vanity Benches Recalled by LaMont Ltd., CPSC

Recall Alert: CPSC, White Tiger Recalls 7,000 Outdoor Folding Chairs

Deli Meat Recalled Nationwide for Bacteria

Posted in News & Notes, Product Hazards and Recalls

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News & Notes

Monday Briefing

February 6, 2012 |

Nearly 4,600 U.S. children hospitalized with broken bones, traumatic brain injury and other harm from physical abuse, report says. The assessment by Yale researchers, who calculated figures for 2006, found that 300 of the abused children died. The study is the first broad U.S. estimate of serious injuries due to child abuse. The researchers said that serious physical abuse is a bigger threat to infant safety than sudden infant death syndrome, and called for a national prevention campaign. Reuters, HealthDay 

Fracking fears spur Virginia county to reject gas drilling in the Marcellus Shale. Rockingham County’s refusal to approve a permit sought by Carrizo Oil and Gas reflects growing concerns about water contamination from the controversial drilling technique known as fracking, even among those who support gas exploration. Virginia has 7,700 natural gas wells in operation, but none extracts gas from the Marcellus Shale, where rich gas reserves are entombed. Fracking uses high-pressure blasts of water mixed with sand and chemicals to break up rock and release gas from the shale. The Washington Post

More than 20 percent of nonsmoking teens are exposed to secondhand smoke in cars, federal study finds.  The researchers said exposure is declining, but they expressed concern that it still is common. Their survey found that, among nonsmoking students, the percentage exposed to smoke in cars fell from 39 percent in 2000 to 22.8 percent in 2009. The researchers urged more states to ban smoking in cars carrying kids. California and three other states already have such laws. HealthDay, Reuters

Global environmental organization emerges as key issue for June’s Rio Summit. France, which claims the backing of 100 countries, has proposed transforming the United Nations Environment Programme into a new worldwide super-agency. Both the U.S. and Canada, however, oppose the idea and instead have backed strengthening the existing agency. The issue will be a key topic at the global environmental forum scheduled for June 20-22 in Rio de Janeiro. Agence France-Presse, The Guardian

Concerns emerge in Britain about a possible new outbreak of mad cow disease. Government health officials are considering monitoring for the fatal brain disease about 30,000 patients known to have received numerous blood transfusions. The proposed research could shed light on how the disease develops and the extent of the health threat, especially among patients who repeatedly receive transfusions. Since the first cases emerged in the mid-1990s, 175 people in Britain have died from the disease, which is linked to eating infected beef. Daily Mail, Birmingham Mail

Settlement may be reached soon in negotiations over Gulf of Mexico oil spill. BP and negotiators for federal and state governments are frantically working to craft a settlement so they won’t have to leave billions of dollars in potential pollution fines and spill damage payments in the hands of a U.S. district judge. The trial is set to begin on Feb. 27. Experts say the negotiations are intended to reach a global settlement that will resolve U.S. criminal and civil charges and compensate federal and state governments for damages. Negotiators also are trying to resolve private claims. The Times-Picayne (New Orleans)

Moody’s Investors Service says major U.S. railroads can afford safety technology. The Wall Street advisory firm issued a special report stating that the rail industry’s leaders, “with $60 billion in annual revenue and several billion dollars in cash … have the wherewithal” to pay for safety systems known as Positive Train Control, or PTC. Republicans in the House of Representatives introduced a bill last week to delay the federal deadline for PTC from 2015 to 2020. As FairWarning has reported, the rail industry is pushing to scale back and delay the systems, which override human error to prevent train wrecks. The installation and operation of PTC systems for passenger and freight trains is projected to cost $13 billion.

Recalls: Jammy Sammy sandwich bars, Healthy People weight loss supplements

Compiled by Stuart Silverstein

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Friday Briefing

February 3, 2012 |

Pilots raise safety concerns about letting drones fly in U.S. skies. Congress has pushed regulators to clear the way for the small unmanned aircraft to be used domestically by law enforcement agencies and businesses. Flights are expected to be restricted to remote areas and to no more than a few hundred feet off the ground. ...

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