October 18th, 2010

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A Growing Problem: Mold Invading the Nation’s Schools

The lack of state laws governing how much mold should be allowed to linger in classrooms is putting schoolchildren and teachers at risk, an investigation by the Orlando Sentinel found. Although reaction to mold varies from person to person, children can experience flu-like symptoms such as coughing and sneezing when exposed to the fungi. Some ... Read more »

When Drugs Are Taken for the Long Term, the FDA May Fall Short in Ensuring Safety

Two recent actions by the Food and Drug Administration — both involving drugs found in some cases to cause the sorts of problems they are intended to prevent — highlight a key issue facing the agency. That issue, according to a news analysis by The New York Times, is: How do you ensure the long-term ... Read more »

Corvair, 50 Years Later, Is Remembered as a Driver of the Car-Safety Movement

It’s not often that a car etches its name into American history, especially one with an unspectacular design that was on the market only for a decade. But then the Chevy Corvair was an unusual automobile. And few remember it now, 50 years after it was introduced, for the typical reasons you’d remember a car. ... Read more »

Mining Regulators Set Ambitious Goal: Ending Black Lung

The federal Mine Safety and Health Administration is formally proposing new limits on the amount of coal dust in surface and underground mines, with the ultimate goal of ending the deadly disease known as black lung. The proposal would halve the permissible amount of coal dust in mines, from 2 milligrams per cubic meter of ... Read more »