May 2011

You are browsing the archive for May 2011.

Watchdog Group Says Pfizer Played Down Suicides Tied to Chantix

Pfizer failed to adequately alert federal authorities for several years about more than half of the suicides suspected of being related to its anti-smoking drug Chantix, according to a report by a nonprofit watchdog group. The analysis by the Institute for Safe Medication Practices found that Pfizer did not submit 589 cases of serious psychiatric ... Read more »

Death Toll From Europe’s E. Coli Outbreak Reaches 16

An aggressive strain of E. coli  bacteria has killed 16 people in Europe, where governments are scrambling to find the source of the outbreak. The epicenter of the mysterious outbreak is northern Germany. But, as The Wall Street Journal reports, since initially being reported on May 22, the illness has stricken hundreds in Sweden, Denmark, France, the United Kingdom, the ... Read more »

Drug Shortages Spreading at U.S. Hospitals

U. S. hospitals increasingly are facing shortages of medicines used to treat serious illnesses such as cancer and heart disease, and cheaper drugs that generate lower profits for manufacturers are particularly scarce, the Associated Press reports. “It’s just a matter of time now before we call for a drug that we need to save a patient’s life and we find out there isn’t any,” ... Read more »

New York Pushing Wal-Mart to Monitor Treatment of Overseas Workers

New York City’s pension funds are pushing Wal-Mart Stores Inc., the world’s biggest retailer, to keep an eye on how workers are treated at the plants of its international suppliers. The New York Times reports that the city pension funds, which own less than 0.2 percent of Wal-Mart’s stock, will raise the proposal at the ... Read more »

Graphic Warnings Prod Smokers to Consider Quitting, Study Says

Health warnings on cigarette packages — particularly graphic ones with images such as pictures of diseased lungs or neck tumors — appear to be an effective way to coax smokers to consider kicking the habit. That’s the conclusion of an international survey published by the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. Researchers who surveyed ... Read more »

Researchers Link Another Pesticide to Parkinson’s Disease

California researchers who previously linked two commonly used pesticides with Parkinson’s disease have identified a third. And their study found that even people who only work near farms where the chemicals are sprayed  — meaning nonfarmworkers such as firefighters and teachers — face a significant risk of developing the motor system disorder. The chemical now being linked ... Read more »

Holy Mackerel! Researchers Say Vendors Lie About the Fish We Eat

Scientists are discovering widespread “seafood fraud” at grocery stores and restaurants, with mislabeled cheap fish being sold as expensive fillets and overfished species substituting for breeds that are plentiful, according to The New York Times. North American and European researchers consistently have found that 20 percent to 25 percent of the seafood they check is mislabeled. Critics say seafood ... Read more »

Superbug-Wary Activists Sue to Rid Livestock Feed of Antibiotics

Charging that the Food and Drug Administration has long known the danger of putting antibiotics into animal feed, several environmental and health groups are suing the federal agency to force it to curb the practice. The plaintiffs, according to the The Wall Street Journal, are specifically aiming for a ban on dosing healthy livestock with penicillin and tetracycline. They accuse the FDA of ... Read more »

Exposing Workers to Asbestos Could Cost Illinois Firm $1.2 Million

Federal regulators are seeking $1.2 million in fines from an Illinois advertising-display firm that they say willfully exposed five of its workers to cancer-causing asbestos. The U.S. Occupational Safety and Health Administration announced Wednesday that the employer, AMD Industries, required the five workers to remove asbestos without giving them proper training or protective gear for ... Read more »

Table Saw Hazards Spur Regulator to Consider Tougher Safety Rules

Under mounting pressure from consumer advocates and despite objections by manufacturers, the head of the Consumer Product Safety Commission says that she will consider tougher safety standards on table saws, which are causing an average of nearly 11 amputations a day in the U.S. The announcement by the CPSC chair, Inez Tenenbaum, followed a Washington, D.C., news conference ... Read more »