In Focus

Promoter of Lap-Band Weight-Loss Surgery Warned Over Misleading Ads

Federal authorities have warned a Southern California marketing company promoting Lap-Band weight-loss surgery that it is illegally engaging in false advertising that downplays the serious risks of the procedure. The Food and Drug Administration told the firm, 1-800-GET-THIN, that its billboards and print advertising “fail to provide required risk information, including warnings, precautions, possible side ... Read more »

Safety Agency Urges Complete Ban on Cellphone Use by Drivers

A federal safety agency, in an unprecedented move, is urging states to adopt bans on all non-emergency cellphone use by drivers. The recommendation by the National Transportation Safety Board, an advisory and investigative agency, would apply to hands-free as well as hand-held devices. As The New York Times reports, that would go beyond any of ... Read more »

Medtronic to Pay $23.5 Million to Settle Charges of Kickbacks to Doctors

The world’s No. 1 maker of medical devices, Medtronic, has agreed to pay $23.5 million to settle federal allegations that it provided kickbacks to doctors who implanted its pacemakers and defibrillators. As Reuters reports, the U.S. Department of Justice accused the Minnesota-based company of making illicit payments to physicians of $1,000 to $2,000 per patient, ... Read more »

Problems Mushroom for Hanford Nuclear Waste Plant

To clean up the enormous nuclear mess at the Hanford site in southeastern Washington, government officials and their contractors for years have worked on a unique solution. They are constructing a plant that, using a process called vitrification, will convert radioactive wastes into glasslike logs that can be permanently disposed underground. But, as The Associated ... Read more »

For 29 Dead Miners, No Justice

Early on April 5, 2010, in the heart of West Virginia coal country, a huge explosion killed 29 workers at Massey Energy’s Upper Big Branch Mine. Later that day, President Obama directed Labor Secretary Hilda L. Solis to conduct “the most thorough and comprehensive investigation possible” and to work with the Justice Department to investigate ... Read more »

Smartphones, Dumb Drivers

Can you safely talk on a cellphone — or for that matter, check your email or scroll through Google Maps — while driving? Well, of course you can. But those other folks with their hands off the wheel and their eyes off the road are a public menace. Unfortunately, that sums up the attitude of ... Read more »

Recall Rundown: Ford Fusions, Mercury Milans, Dog Food, Pajamas and More

Ford Recalls 129,000 Fusions and Mercury Milans After Studs Fracture on Steel Wheels Honda Recalls 126,000 Gold Wing Motorcycles for Rear Brake System Flaw 2012 Subaru Impreza, Legacy, Outback: Recall Alert Some Nissan Juke Models Recalled for Freezing Door Locks, Faulty Boost-Pressure Sensors 2011 Nissan Rogue Recalled Children’s Pajamas Recalled by Bella Bliss Due to ... Read more »

EPA for First Time Blames Fracking for Polluting Water Supply

The energy industry’s longstanding claim that the controversial drilling technique known as fracking has never been definitively linked to polluted drinking water is looking all wet. For the first time, the Environmental Protection Agency has scientifically tied underground water pollution to fracking. As the investigative news organization ProPublica reports, an EPA draft report released Thursday ... Read more »

FDA Advisers Want Straight Talk About Risks on Labels for Birth Control Pills

After weighing the benefits of a new generation of birth control pills against potentially fatal blood clot risks associated with the drugs, federal scientific advisers have called for a regulatory compromise. Their recommendation to the Food and Drug Administration: Let the pills stay on the market, but require straight talk about the risks on the ... Read more »

Settlement Forces U.S. to Decide Whether BPA Should Be Banned

The controversial chemical BPA — commonly found in the linings of food cans and plastics — faces a day of decision. As The Washington Post reports, the Food and Drug Administration must rule by March 31 on whether to ban the chemical, according to a court settlement reached between the agency and the Natural Re­sources ... Read more »