Commentary

Rental Car Firms Taking a Wrong Turn on Recall Bill

Rental Car Firms Taking a Wrong Turn on Recall Bill

What began as a simple bill to assure that car rental companies in California provide defect-free cars to their customers has become ensnarled in a full-out campaign by those companies to kill the bill as it moves through the state’s legislature.

Assuming You Want to Know, Genetic Tests Are No Crystal Ball

Assuming You Want to Know, Genetic Tests Are No Crystal Ball

Genetic test kits, which promise a crystal ball into a person’s medical future, have drawn withering criticism since 2006, when the U.S. Government Accountability Office found that the test firms make medically unproven predictions and provide results so ambiguous that they are meaningless. The controversy led the U.S. Food and Drug Administration to hold two days of hearings on the kits last month. All the same, the home test kits have tantalized many consumers. The FDA estimates that 150,000 to 200,000 have been sold in this country. Given my family’s sad medical history, I felt some of the allure.

Playing the “Regulatory Uncertainty” Card

Is America’s economic recovery being stymied by the “uncertainty” associated with new or changing federal regulation? Are businesses standing on the sidelines while they wait for the rule-making whirlwind to settle? Remapping Debate recently set off in search of real-world confirmation of this oft-heard claim — one made, over the past year or so, by ... Read more »

U.S. Highway Safety Chief Says FairWarning Op-Ed Got it Wrong

Ben Kelley, a board member of the Center for Auto Safety penned a recent opinion piece detailing what he perceives to be America’s “dangerously weak” commitment to stopping death and injury on our roadways. He could not be more wrong. The Department of Transportation is laser-focused on safety and that includes the staff at the ... Read more »

How Quickly They Forget

Following the recall of millions of toys from China because of lead paint and other hazards, Congress got its act together in 2008 and passed the Consumer Product Safety Improvement Act. Bipartisan majorities rallied around the idea that the government should ensure that products — whether they’re made abroad or here — won’t sicken or ... Read more »

FDA seems to take light approach to Allergan and Lap-Band

In 1960, a young inspector for the Food and Drug Administration faced down a powerful drug company by rejecting its application to sell a morning-sickness drug in the United States. The company, Richardson-Merrell, griped about her repeated demands for more safety data. They complained to her superiors, branding her as a nitpicker. But she stood ... Read more »

Auto Safety in the Breakdown Lane

Auto Safety in the Breakdown Lane

America’s once-vigorous commitment to stopping death and injury on our roads — one of the nation’s most severe public health problems — has become dangerously weak. With the failure of auto safety legislation in the last Congress, it appears that the public and its policymakers may no longer be interested in supporting tough measures to substantially reduce bloodshed on the highways.

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 »

An Assault on Everyone’s Safety

The Glock 19 is a semiautomatic pistol so reliable that it is used by thousands of law enforcement agencies around the world, including the New York Police Department, to protect the police and the public. On Saturday, in Tucson, it became an instrument of carnage for two preventable reasons: It had an oversize ammunition clip ... Read more »

The McVictim Syndrome Could Kill Us

Call it the McVictim syndrome. Too many pundits, public health experts and politicians are working overtime to find scapegoats for America’s obesity epidemic. In his latest book, former FDA Commissioner David A. Kessler argues that modern food is addictive. In it, he recounts how he was once helpless to stop himself from eating a cookie. ... Read more »