January 2011

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Settlement of Avandia Diabetes Drug Case Averts First Trial

GlaxoSmithKline has settled a widely followed lawsuit over its Avandia diabetes drug, averting the first trial out of thousands of cases that allege the company failed to warn consumers about the heart attack risks of the medication. The settlement resolves what the presiding judge chose as a case to serve as a “bellwether” of how ... Read more »

Watch Out! The Assault Vehicle Is Loose!

Americans are infatuated with guns. And when you’re infatuated, you sometimes can’t think straight. Maybe that’s why, three weeks after the Tucson shootings that shook the nation, we’re still no closer to banning oversize magazines like the 33-bullet model allegedly used there. Maybe it will help clarify issues if we imagine an alternate universe — ... Read more »

Oil Execs Developing Agency to Supervise Drilling Safety

Big oil company executives are developing an industry-led, deep-water drilling safety body that could launch within weeks. As reported by the Financial Times, the plan by the industry heavyweights comes in response to a recent recommendation in the final report of the presidential panel on the Deepwater Horizon disaster in the Gulf of Mexico. The ... Read more »

Chinese Arrests for Food Safety Violations Totaled 248 Last Year

Chinese government officials have announced that 248 people were arrested in 2010 for violations of food safety standards. Still, officials sought to downplay concerns about the nation’s food safety, a long-running issue. According to a statement from the National Food Safety Regulating Work Office, “No major incident occurred last year, and the overall food safety ... Read more »

EPA Moves to Curb Pesticide Tests on Human Subjects

The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency has proposed tight restrictions on using people as test subjects — or, as critics have put it, guinea pigs — in pesticide research. Under pressure from the pesticides industry, the EPA in 2003 began lifting a moratorium on such testing involving humans. It allowed experiments in which people are intentionally ... Read more »

Courts Clear Way for Consumers to Sue Drug Companies

Two federal appeals courts have recently upheld the right of consumers to bring defective product lawsuits over prescription drugs, rejecting the claims of manufacturers that only federal regulators — and not the courts — can decide whether a drug is dangerous. The so-called preemption issue is a crucial one in drug liability suits. The Bush ... Read more »

U.S. Sues Boston Scientific Over Defective Heart Defibrillators

The U.S. Department of Justice has filed a civil lawsuit against Boston Scientific Corp. and its Guidant unit, alleging that company officials knowingly sold implantable heart devices with a potentially life-threatening defect. In its complaint filed Thursday in federal court in Minnesota, the government claims that Guidant corrected the flaw in its defibrillators but then ... Read more »

Mine Operators Ignore Safety Despite Tougher Inspections, Officials Say

Despite a high-profile, intensified inspections program, authorities say safety violations still abound in the nation’s mines. The Mine Safety and Health Administration said that during its December “impact” inspections, officials issued 288 citations at 17 mines. That was up from 250 citations at 22 mines in November. Previously, when citations numbers had declined, MSHA officials ... Read more »

Medically Unnecessary Early Births Abound, Survey of Hospitals Shows

Despite the risks inherent in early births, many U.S. hospitals are delivering a huge number of babies ahead of time for no apparent medical reason, a health care advocacy group says. A new study from Leapfrog Group focused on the rate of early elective births–defined as births via induced labor or a C-section before 39 ... Read more »

Ford Recalls Windstar Minivans, Faces Safety Probe of Fusions

Ford Motor Co. has issued a corrosion-related safety recall for more than 400,000 Windstar minivans in cold-weather states, while federal regulators have begun an investigation of alleged defects in some 2010 Ford Fusion sedans. The Windstar recall is intended to fix brackets and mounts that could separate from the vehicle’s subframe — the structure carrying ... Read more »