Jessica Roberts

Offshore Oil-Drilling Inspectors Are in Disarray, Report Finds

The inspectors responsible for ensuring the safety of offshore oil drilling operations are overwhelmed by their workloads, trained insufficiently and inadequately protected from industry pressure, according to the Department of the Interior’s inspector general. Many of the problems, which include a lack of official procedures for dealing with key issues, reflect regulators’ failure to keep ... Read more »

FDA Panel Advises Approval of First New Diet Pill in a Decade

A medication that would be the nation’s first new prescription diet drug in a decade may be nearing approval by the Food and Drug Administration. An FDA advisory committee, in a 13-to-7 vote, has recommended approval of Contrave, a diet drug from Orexigen Therapeutics of San Diego. The panel, Reuters reports, found that the benefits ... Read more »

Cell Phone Use by Moms May Lead to Misbehaving Children, Study Suggests

Careless driving and rude public behavior are common symptoms of the cell phone habit. Now, research in Denmark has gone farther, suggesting that wireless use by expectant mothers may cause their kids to act out. Children whose mothers regularly used cell phones while pregnant are more likely to display behavioral problems, according to the study in the Journal of Epidemiology and Community Health. The ... Read more »

Despite Warning, FDA Holding Off on Regulating Donated Breast Milk Banks

Despite issuing a recent warning about the risks of donated breast milk, the Food and Drug Administration has no plans to start regulating breast milk banks around the country. Dr. Josh Sharfstein, FDA deputy commissioner, told a panel of experts who met Monday to advise the agency on the issue that FDA involvement “in a ... Read more »

Lobbyists Feast on Food Safety Bill

At least 221 organizations hired 77 lobbying firms to try to influence the sweeping overhaul of food safety laws passed by the Senate last week, according to The Washington Post. The lobbying over the Food and Drug Administration Food Safety Modernization Act began after the bill was  introduced at the beginning of last year by Sen. ... Read more »

Doctor May Have Implanted Hundreds of Unnecessary Stents in Cardiac Patients, Investigators Find

A Senate investigation has found that a Baltimore-area cardiologist may have implanted 585 heart stents from 2007 to 2009 that were medically unnecessary, while collecting millions in reimbursements from Medicare and private insurance. The Wall Street Journal reports that even after the cardiologist, Mark Midei, was barred last year from continuing to practice at St. ... Read more »

Iowa Egg Farm at Center of Salmonella Outbreak Cleared to Resume Sales

The Iowa egg producer at the center of the salmonella outbreak that sickened more than 1,820 people and led to the August recall of 550 million eggs has been cleared by the Food and Drug Administration to resume limited sales of shell eggs. The FDA notified Wright County Egg that it could begin shipping from two of the 73 hen ... Read more »

Cooper Tire & Rubber Co. Charged with Willful Safety Violations

The Occupational Safety and Health Administration is seeking fines of $206,500 against Cooper Tire & Rubber Co., accusing the company of willful and serious violations following an incident in which a worker suffered serious burns at its Cooper’s Findlay, Ohio plant. The new citations mark the fifth time in six years that OSHA has charged the tire maker with safety violations, the Toledo ... Read more »

Senate Passes Landmark Food Safety Bill

The U.S. Senate has voted 73-25 to pass the Food Safety Modernization Act, a measure that would lead to the biggest overhaul in the nation’s food safety laws since the 1930s. The Washington Post reports that the bill would grant new power to the Food and Drug Administration to issue food recalls directly, rather than ... Read more »

After Long Hiatus, Atomic Plant in Finland Highlights Nuclear Comeback

Ending a long pause in nuclear development in Western Europe, the first atomic plant to be ordered since 1986 is under construction on an island off the coast of Finland, Reuters reports. The massive Olkiluoto 3 project  is one of 63 nuclear plants being built in 15 countries, according to the International Atomic Energy Agency. More than two-thirds of those plants are in Asia, primarily ... Read more »