June 2011

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Head to the Beach … And Jump Into the Contaminated Water?

Have fun at the beach this July 4th weekend. But watch out for dirty, disease-causing water. That cheery advice comes from the Natural Resources Defense Council, which says that “our nation’s beaches continue to suffer from bacterial pollution that puts swimmers at risk.” The environmental group, in its annual report on beach water quality, said ... Read more »

Investigators Say West Virginia Mine Owner Falsified Safety Records

Investigators Say West Virginia Mine Owner Falsified Safety Records

The owner of the West Virginia coal mine where 29 men died in an explosion last year engaged in a cover-up, federal investigators say, to keep government inspectors in the dark about safety hazards. The key act of deception that investigators attributed to the Upper Big Branch owner: Keeping two sets of books, and giving ... Read more »

Despite Pleas, FDA Panel Again Rejects Avastin for Breast Cancer Patients

Ever since federal regulators took a first step in December to revoke approval for the breast cancer drug Avastin, activists have pleaded for authorities to reconsider. And now, in an unusual move, a Food and Drug Administration advisory committee has reconsidered the decision — and rejected Avastin for breast cancer treatment once again. The unanimous ... Read more »

Journal Exposes Enriched Doctors Who Downplayed Product’s Side Effects

A medical publication, The Spine Journal, is showing some extraordinary backbone. In a rare and possibly unprecedented move, the journal’s editors have dedicated an entire issue to exposing apparent wrongdoing involving doctors who took tens of millions of dollars from a medical device maker, Medtronic — and then downplayed or ignored serious complications linked to one ... Read more »

Investigation Finds U.S. Figures Understate Intercity Bus Crash Deaths

The federal government is making the nation’s intercity buses appear safer than they actually are, a newspaper investigation has found. The National Highway Traffic Safety Administration, the agency responsible for tracking motor coach accidents, does that by under-reporting the number of fatalities in such crashes, according to a USA Today review of government records and news reports. Some ... Read more »

Sprouts Linked to Salmonella Outbreak in 5 States

Sprouts are now being fingered as the culprit in food contamination outbreaks on both sides of the Atlantic. In this country, as USA Today reports, authorities say that salmonella linked to alfalfa sprouts has sickened 21 people in five states since April 12, sending three people to the hospital. Europe has struggled in recent weeks ... Read more »

Pediatricians Urge Limits to Junk Food Ads on TV

Commercials for fast food and junk food should be banned during children’s TV programming because they are helping to make kids fat, says the leading pediatricians group. As the Los Angeles Times reports, the American Academy of Pediatrics has issued a statement saying TV, cell phones and other media are partly to blame for child and adolescent obesity. The ... Read more »

New Safety Standards to Prevent Crib Deaths Ban Some Models

New and expectant parents in search of baby cribs will have to avoid thrift stores and yard sales for awhile. As the Chicago Tribune reports, it became illegal today to sell or even donate a crib that fails to meet new crib safety rules that are the toughest in the world. Even cribs that previously avoided a ... Read more »

Despite Fire and Flooding, Officials Say Nuke Plants Are Safe

Mother Nature is wreaking havoc around nuclear sites in two states, but authorities dismiss any risk of a radiation release. In northern New Mexico, as the Associated Press reports, firefighters are battling a wildfire in the mountains above Los Alamos, home to the government nuclear laboratory that produced the first atomic bomb. As of this ... Read more »

Europe’s E. Coli Death Toll Rises to 47

The death toll from the E. coli outbreak that originated in Germany has risen by three to at least 47, the Associated Press reports. The new tally from Germany’s disease control center, the Robert Koch Institute, came as experts debated whether a recent E. coli outbreak in France is related to the one that emerged ... Read more »