November 2010

You are browsing the archive for November 2010.

Adventures in Ghostwriting: Big Pharma’s Very Own Textbook

A major drug maker and its consultants provided substantial content for a medical text that was later credited to a pair of prominent physicians, The New York Times reports. The book–”Recognition and Treatment of Psychiatric Disorders: A Psychopharmacology Handbook for Primary Care”– was published in 1999, and ostensibly co-authored by Dr. Charles B. Nemeroff, currently chairman of psychiatry at the University of Miami medical school, ... Read more »

Cooper Tire & Rubber Co. Charged with Willful Safety Violations

The Occupational Safety and Health Administration is seeking fines of $206,500 against Cooper Tire & Rubber Co., accusing the company of willful and serious violations following an incident in which a worker suffered serious burns at its Cooper’s Findlay, Ohio plant. The new citations mark the fifth time in six years that OSHA has charged the tire maker with safety violations, the Toledo ... Read more »

Senate Passes Landmark Food Safety Bill

The U.S. Senate has voted 73-25 to pass the Food Safety Modernization Act, a measure that would lead to the biggest overhaul in the nation’s food safety laws since the 1930s. The Washington Post reports that the bill would grant new power to the Food and Drug Administration to issue food recalls directly, rather than ... Read more »

After Long Hiatus, Atomic Plant in Finland Highlights Nuclear Comeback

Ending a long pause in nuclear development in Western Europe, the first atomic plant to be ordered since 1986 is under construction on an island off the coast of Finland, Reuters reports. The massive Olkiluoto 3 project  is one of 63 nuclear plants being built in 15 countries, according to the International Atomic Energy Agency. More than two-thirds of those plants are in Asia, primarily ... Read more »

Polluters Get Stimulus Funds, Escape Environmental Oversight, Report Finds

Billions of dollars in stimulus funds from the Obama administration, designed to promote clean energy and create jobs, have been doled out to some of the nation’s biggest polluters while exempting them from basic environmental oversight, according to an investigation by the Center for Public Integrity. More than 179,000 “categorical exclusions” were provided for stimulus projects funded by federal ... Read more »

Recall Rundown: Tylenol, Whole Foods Cheese, Volvo, Jaguar and More

Recall of Tylenol Cold Multi-Symptom Meijer Recalls Oscillating Ceramic Heaters Due to Fire Hazard Volvo, Jaguar Recall Thousands of Vehicles to Fix Fuel Systems and Wipers Whole Foods Cheddar Latest in String of Cheese Recalls Canadian Sandwich and Cheese Recall Expands Fairbanks Fish Processor Will Recall Salmon

Worldwide, Second-Hand Smoke Kills 600,000 People Each Year, Study Finds

Second-hand smoke is responsible for an estimated 603,000 deaths each year, or about one of every 100 deaths worldwide, according to researchers for the World Health Organization. In the first study to gauge the effect of second-hand smoke globally, the researchers concluded that children are more heavily exposed to second-hand smoke than other age grups, and account for 166,000 deaths each year ... Read more »

In California, Wait Times Down for Emergency Calls from Cell Phones

Millions of cell phone users in California are being connected more reliably to emergency services when they make 911 calls, the Los Angeles Times reports. The number of emergency calls from wireless phones in California that were delayed or failed to go through has fallen from 42 percent, or 4.9 million calls in 2007, to 5 ... Read more »

After “Blackout in a Can,” Alcoholic Whipped Cream Worries Health Officials

Even as the reformulated Four Loko alcoholic energy drinks return to store shelves, regulators and public health officials are expressing concern about another potentially intoxicating product: booze-filled whipped cream, The Boston Herald reports. One 30-proof whipped cream sold under the name Cream is now available on liquor store shelves in such states as Nevada, Illinois, ... Read more »

By 3-2 Vote, Agency Approves Consumer Access to Product Safety Complaints

The U.S. Consumer Product Safety Commission is set to launch a new  website that for the first time will provide public access to safety complaints about consumer products. Commissioners voted 3-2 on Wednesday to approve the site, SaferProducts.gov, which will make complaint information available to consumers without  prior approval from manufacturers, according to Bloomberg. Currently, ... Read more »