September 20th, 2010

You are browsing the archive for September 20th, 2010.

FairWarining Reports

At Least 6 Perish in New York Crash, Highlighting Stability Concerns About Passenger Vans

A spectacular rollover crash that killed at least six members of a New York church has renewed questions about the stability of 15-passenger vans — which studies show become more dangerous when used. as intended. to transport large numbers of people. The 14 parishioners from the Joy Fellowship Church of Bronx, N.Y., were traveling on the New York State Thruway to visit a sister ... Read more »

Free Drinking Water Isn’t On the Menu at Many School Cafeterias, But California Considers a Solution

At many school cafeterias, there is no way for a child to get a simple, free drink of water to have with a meal. For example, the Los Angeles Unified School District acknowledged to the Los Angeles Times that most of its schools don’t have free water in eating areas, and circumstances are similar at ... Read more »

New Cancer Drugs Stir Debate About Withholding Treatment in Clinical Trials

A new wave of cancer treatments is raising questions about the way drug trials are conducted with one group of patients barred from trying a promising new medicine–as illustrated by The New York Times in a tale of two gravely ill cousins. Both young men had melanoma, a particularly lethal form of skin cancer. One saw his tumors stop growing ... Read more »

Lifeguards Increasingly Draw Complaints for Texting On the Job

Lifeguards who text on the job, turning their eyes to their cellphones instead of the pools and beaches they are supposed to be watching, are drawing more and more complaints, The New York Times reports. “Lives are being endangered, if not already lost, because of text messaging,” said Bernard J. Fisher II, the director of ... Read more »

In Vitriolic Autism-Vaccine Debate, Report Lifts Some of the Fog

A new investigation by CBS News attempts to clear up some of the confusion plaguing the long-running, fiery debate over whether there are links between autism and childhood vaccinations. The issue has long pitted parents of affected children searching for answers against the vast majority of medical professionals who have argued that there are no links ... Read more »

Penalties Sought By OSHA For Cave-In Risks, Other Violations

Federal authorities are seeking $112,000 in penalties from a Florida contractor accused of willfully exposing employees to cave-in hazards during work on a storm water project in Lake Mary near Orlando. The citations against Cathcart Contracting Co. of  Winter Springs, Fla., were announced by the Occupational Safety and Health Administration. The agency said the company had rented safety equipment to protect employees ... Read more »