Elise Craig

Drop-Side Baby Cribs, Linked to Dozens of Deaths, Are Outlawed

The Consumer Product Safety Commission has voted to outlaw drop-side baby cribs, the traditional crib that has cradled millions of babies for generations, the Associated Press reports. Since 2000, drop-side cribs have been blamed for at least 32 infant and toddler deaths, and are suspected in another 14. Over the past five years, more than ... Read more »

For High School Seniors, Marijuana is More Popular Than Cigarettes, Survey Finds

More high school seniors smoke marijuana than cigarettes, according to the annual Monitoring the Future survey sponsored by the National Institute on Drug Abuse. At 19.2 percent, the percentage of high school seniors who said they smoked cigarettes during the previous 30 days was the lowest since the survey began in 1975, and it was ... Read more »

Loophole Lets Gun Dealers Reopen After Licenses Are Revoked

Every year regulators revoke the licenses of about 100 gun dealers for violations of federal law, an extreme step taken only when a pattern of infractions occurs that are considered a threat to public safety. But The Washington Post reports, in a story included in the newspaper’s “The Hidden Life of Guns” series, that it ... Read more »

Feds to Review Nevada Probe of Asbestos Exposure in Vegas Casino

The U.S. Occupational Safety and Health Administration is scrutinizing how Nevada officials conducted a 2007 investigation into the remodeling of the Flamingo Las Vegas hotel and casino, which exposed workers, and possibly guests, to airborne asbestos, the Las Vegas Review-Journal reports. Federal OSHA officials are trying to determine whether their counterparts at Nevada OSHA understated ... Read more »

Disability Program Prompts Needy Families to Medicate Children

A $10 billion federal disability program has gone seriously astray, becoming an alternative welfare system that risks harming youngsters by giving parents financial incentives to medicate their children, The Boston Globe reports. The Supplemental Security Income Program, created by Congress in 1972 to help low-income children with severe physical disabilities including Down  syndrome, is now ... Read more »

Survey Finds Fewer Cancers Than Expected in Town of “Erin Brockovich” Fame

The Oscar-winning movie “Erin Brockovich” brought widespread attention to the problem of groundwater contamination in the Southern California desert community of Hinkley, where carcinogenic chromium 6 was dumped into local waste ponds. A new state survey of the area, however, found that it has not suffered a disproportionately high number of cases of cancer. Between ... Read more »

Website to Compare How Hospitals Rate in Preventing Bloodstream Infections

To reduce preventable infections and deaths, most hospitals will begin reporting next month the number of patients who contract bloodstream infections following treatment in intensive care units, McClatchy Newspapers reports. Later in 2011, the information will be made public on the federal government’s “hospital compare” website that will show which hospitals best protect their patients ... Read more »

After Years of Edging Up, Life Expectancy in the U.S. Dips, Report Says

Life expectancy in the U.S. has fallen slightly, according to a new government report. The life expectancy for a baby born in 2008 is 77.8 years, down from 2007′s all-time-high of 77.9 years. Life expectancy for Americans generally has increased steadily since 1975, but the numbers dipped in 1993 and again in 2005. The report’s ... Read more »

Medical Journal Condemns Canada for Exporting Asbestos

Canada is coming under criticism from the British medical journal The Lancet for exporting asbestos to poor countries, while virtually banning the use of the substance within its own borders. Unlike other wealthy nations, Canada remains a major exporter of chrysotile, or white asbestos, notes the report in The Lancet published Thursday. According to USA ... Read more »

Mine Safety Bill Spurred By Upper Big Branch Disaster Fails in the House

Congressional efforts to retool mine safety legislation — which were spurred by April’s deadly Upper Big Branch explosion in West Virginia, the nation’s worst mining disaster in 40 years — have failed for this year, the Pittsburgh Post-Gazette reports. The bill would have given the U.S. Mine Safety and Health Administration the power to shut down ... Read more »