March 2011

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Nuclear Plant Manager Files Whistleblower Suit Against California Utility

A former manager at California’s San Onofre nuclear plant is suing his ex-employer, charging that the company wrongfully terminated him in retaliation for his efforts to blow the whistle on safety violations. As Reuters reports, the firing came after the federal Nuclear Regulatory Commission sent a warning letter in March, 2010, to Southern California Edison, ... Read more »

After Deadly Crashes, Congress Eyes Bus Safety Reforms

A rash of tour bus accidents, including two this month that killed 17 people, has prompted a new drive for legislation toughening intercity bus-safety standards. As The Washington Post reports, a push to require seat belts, strengthen roofs and windows, and install stabilization devices for intercity buses is being revived in Congress and is likely ... Read more »

Health Umpires Want Smokeless Tobacco Tossed out of Major Leagues

Timing their pitch to coincide with today’s opening day of the new baseball season, public health officials from 15 cities have called on Major League Baseball and the players’ union to rid the game of smokeless tobacco products. “The use of smokeless tobacco endangers the health of Major League ballplayers and sets a terrible example ... Read more »

Utility Engineer Warned of Tsunami Threat at Japanese Nuclear Plant

An engineer with Tokyo Electric Power Co., the operator of Japan’s stricken Fukushima Daiichi nuclear power plant, warned in 2007 that there was a 10 percent chance of a tsunami causing catastrophic damage, but his concerns went unheeded by superiors. As Reuters reports, Toshiaki Sakai, a senior safety engineer with Tepco, as the utility is ... Read more »

Avoiding Foods Packaged With BPA Yields Swift Benefits, Study Says

Consumers worried about their intake of the chemical Bisphenol A, or BPA, might be able to cut back significantly simply by chopping the foods packaged in cans and plastics out of their diets. As the Los Angeles Times reports, a study from the Breast Cancer Fund and the Silent Spring Institute says that substituting foods ... Read more »

9 Alabama Hospital Patients Die After Receiving Tainted IV Nutrition

Nine critically ill patients who received nutrition from contaminated intravenous bags have died, and 10 others were harmed, at six hospitals in Alabama. As the Associated Press reports, all of the 19 patients were critically ill before receiving the IV and being infected with a bacteria known as serratia marcescens. State officials say, however, that ... Read more »

Amid Meth Crisis, States Weigh Making Cold Pills Prescription-Only

In a new attack on the surging methamphetamine problem, a growing number of states are considering laws that would require a prescription for cold and allergy pills used in making the illegal stimulant. But the proposals also are meeting resistance from critics who say patients shouldn’t be forced to visit doctors to get, say, a ... Read more »

FDA Panel to Review Whether Food Dyes Trigger Hyperactivity

For parents searching for explanations about why their children are hyperactive, one answer might be in the food pantry. As the The Washington Post reports, two studies sponsored by the British government in recent years have linked some artificial food dyes, and a preservative, to the affliction. The British government responded in 2009 by urging ... Read more »

Amid ‘Maximum Alert,’ Japanese Leader Calls for Clean Energy

Amid Japan’s struggles with its nuclear disaster, the nation’s leader issued a call for a clean-energy push to reduce its future reliance on nuclear power. As reported by Agence France-Presse, Prime Minister Naoto Kan told a parliamentary committee that Japan should take the lead internationally in developing less dangerous sources of power. “Taking this as ... Read more »

Airport Scanners Pose Little Radiation Risk, Study Finds

A new study weighing in on the controversial issue of whether “backscatter” X-ray security scanners at airports pose radiation risks has dismissed the potential threat. As Bloomberg reports, the study, published in the Archives of Internal Medicine, has found that the body scanners, which are used to detect explosives, expose travelers to just 0.1 microsievert ... Read more »