Study Suggests Autism More Prevalent Than Previously Thought

Autism and related conditions might be far more widespread than previously thought. As the Los Angeles Times reports, a groundbreaking study of South Korean children found that 2.6 percent — one out of every 38 kids — suffer from from autism spectrum disorders, which can range from severe autism to more mild disorders such as ... Read more »

Despite Reforms, Tainted Food Plagues Chinese Consumers

Despite an unprecedented effort to crack down on threats to the safety of the food supply, contamination scandals abound in China. As The New York Times reports, ever since melamine-tainted milk sickened about 300,000 infants and killed at least six in 2008, China’s government has worked to modernize its regulatory regime to protect the nation’s ... Read more »

Watchdog Criticizes Lax Safety Testing for Some School Foods

The Government Accountability Office has no bone to pick with the way the nation’s school meals program inspects ground beef for food-borne illnesses. In a new report, the GAO says that the U.S. Department of Agriculture actually calls for the raw meat for school children to be tested more thoroughly than is required for the ... Read more »

Medical Societies Throw Doors Open to Industry Money

Despite widespread concerns about the potential influence of drug and medical device company money on doctors, societies that represent specialists continue to take in lots of Big Pharma cash. As ProPublica reports, the Heart Rhythm Society provides a leading illustration of the practice. It pulls in millions off of its role as the gatekeeper between ... Read more »

To Prevent a 2nd Disaster, Japan Moves to Shut Hamaoka Nuke Plant

Japanese Prime Minister Naoto Kan has called for the closing of a controversial nuclear plant about 120 miles southwest of Tokyo until improvements are made to protect the facility and the surrounding region against the risk of an earthquake and tsunami. As Agence France-Presse reports, the Japanese government wants the operator of the Hamaoka nuclear ... Read more »

Coal Industry Makes Pitch for Relaxed Safety Regulation

Barely a year after the nation’s deadliest coal mining accident in four decades, the industry is calling for relaxing federal regulatory procedures to exempt mines with good safety records from routine workplace inspections. As the The Charleston Gazette reports, a representative from the National Mining Assn. suggested the idea at a Wednesday hearing of the ... Read more »

Study Finds Surgery Benefits Younger Prostate Cancer Patients

Men stricken with prostate cancer before the age of 65 often might be better off undergoing surgery to remove the prostate gland rather than waiting to see how the disease develops. As the Associated Press reports, a study led by Swedish researchers has found that the so-called “watchful waiting” approach — which calls for holding ... Read more »

Bypass Surgeries Decline, But Are All Patients Better Off?

The frequency of heart bypass surgery has plummeted in recent years, a product of Americans leading healthier lifestyles and doctors adopting other treatments for blocked arteries. As HealthDay News reports, a study to be published in the Journal of the American Medical Association finds that the number of heart patients who received bypass surgery dropped ... Read more »

5 Miners Dead, 9 Missing in Mexican Coal Mine Blast

A coal mine explosion in northern Mexico has killed five workers, and another another nine are trapped and feared dead. As the Associated Press reports, Mexican authorities had hoped to fly in Chilean experts who worked on the rescue of 33 trapped miners last year. But after rescuers discovered the first five bodies and saw ... Read more »

BP to Pay $25 Million Settlement for Alaska Oil Spills

Five years after BP pipelines dumped more than 5,000 barrels of crude over Alaska’s North Slope, the company has agreed to pay $25 million in civil penalties. As the Associated Press reports, the fine is the largest per barrel civil penalty ever issued for an oil spill. Still, it stands to be dwarfed by what ... Read more »