Fortune Magazine has an opinion piece up blasting advocacy groups, retailers and politicians for working to get a chemical found in baby bottles and infant formula cans, called Bisphenol A (BPA), off the shelves. In the piece, Marc Gunther accuses retailers like Wal-Mart, CVS and Toys R' Us of playing FDA by refusing to sell products containing the chemical. But retailers say their reasoning is that consumers do not want to buy them.
As we've reported, the National Institutes of Health and the House Energy and Commerce Committee have been investigating the chemical's safety. A recent draft report from NIH suggests it might harm babies and young children.
Nonetheless, Gunther argues that the chemical must be safe because the FDA says it is.
Move over, Jenny McCarthy. The former Playboy playmate-turned vaccine basher has competition from a Hollywood newcomer, Amanda Peet. In a profile featured on the cover of this month's Cookie magazine, Peet discloses that Dr. Paul Offit, inventor of an important rotavirus vaccine and public enemy-number one of the anti-vaccination crowd, assuaged her anxieties over vaccination after the birth of her baby in 2007. She has fully vaccinated the tot, is quite happy about it, and says that parents who don't vaccinate are "parasites." Peet's comment, and her decision to do a pro-vaccine promotional ad infuriated the vaccine skeptics, some of whom wrote menacing letters to Peet and her retinue. Has the public zeitgeist turned on the activists who, blaming vaccines for autism, urge parents to delay or avoid vaccinating their kids?
The FDA is reconsidering whether the recent nationwide salmonella poisoning outbreak was caused by tomatoes and not another key salsa ingredient, like jalapenos.
Evidence suggests vaccines do not cause autism, but anger understandably runs deep amongst many of the parents of the 1 in 150 U.S. children diagnosed with the disorder.
When the head of the EPA and OMB say "transparency," they don't mean public paper trails, answers or accountability. Instead, it's about the White House.
After its executives spied on immigrant farmworkers and slandered them on-line to fight a grass-roots campaign for better pay and working conditions, Burger King Corp. abruptly reversed course Friday. The company caved into the workers’ demands, agreeing to pay them an extra penny a pound for tomatoes that go on Whoppers and other BK products, according to a joint news release with the Coalition of Immokalee Workers.
In a response I received after my anthrax vaccine story had been posted, Health and Human Services spokesman Bill Hall denied that his agency had erred in withdrawing the Vaxgen contract. Vaxgen missed its deadlines and failed to fix its problems, he said, and HHS was still pursuing a recombinant anthrax vaccine (as I noted in the story, Emergent is likely to win this contract).
One of the biggest failures of the $5.6 billion federal Bioshield program, which was supposed to provide drugs and vaccines against terror agents, is the story of the anthrax vaccine.
The United States is suffering its worst measles outbreak in at least seven years, health officials announced Thursday, because parents who fear the measles-mumps-rubella (MMR) shot aren't vaccinating their kids--in Israel, Switzerland, and here in the U.S. So far this year at least 70 cases have been reported, more than any year since the 116 cases of 2001. That number will easily be topped by the end of the year, said Dr. Anne Schuchat, head of the CDC's Center for Immunization and Respiratory Diseases. There have been measles cases reported in 10 states this year. In the latest outbreak, eight unvaccinated children in a Washington state family fell ill after relatives attended an international church conference.
Bisphenol A, one of the chemicals we talk about in today's story on the EPA and children's health, has been in the news this week for its potential harm to children. The chemical -- used in the manufacturing of plastic baby bottles and baby formula cans -- can harm the development of a child's brain and reproductive organs, a federal health agency said in a report released this week.
Merck didn't pull the plug on a trial, despite a clear signal that patients taking Vioxx were dying of heart attacks at higher rates, the authors of a major medical journal say.
The case of 9-year-old Hannah Poling, diagnosed with autism, has renewed fervor amongst parent groups who blame vaccines for their children's illnesses.
Bad news for beer lovers and brewers. Climate change is likely to drive beer prices up even further over the next 30 years, according to New Zealand's National Institute of Water and Atmospheric Research. Climate scientist Jim Salinger said today that shifting climates will likely cause a decline in the production of malting barley, especially in New Zealand and Australia. This means beer production could take a serious hit as land gets drier and water supplies decrease. Breweries can adapt by switching to different malt varieties.
The vaccine scare being stirred up by people who blame vaccines for childhood autistic disorders may be starting to have a serious impact on public health. The Nassau County Department of Health today announced that a child with measles visited seven stores in a Cedarhurst, New York shopping area last Thursday. The county is offering measles hyperimmune globulin--a post-exposure prophylactic--to people who may have been exposed to this most contagious of contagious diseases. According to a public health source, the un-immunized boy was exposed to a sick aunt on a visit to Jerusalem, and became ill a few days after returning to the states.
Measles transmission stopped within the United States about a decade ago, but we still get cases imported from less-vaccinated countries--particularly Germany, Switzerland, Japan, Korea and Israel. This is the third outbreak of measles in the past few months linked to unvaccinated children. In San Diego, an outbreak started in January in a community center where many parents of autistic children have been outspoken in their suspicion of vaccines. A second outbreak is going on now in Arizona.
The vaccines-cause-autism controversy has reached a new low. Clifford Shoemaker, an attorney who represents parents of allegedly vaccine-injured children in the federal "vaccine court" and other venues, has subpoenaed Kathleen Seidel, a sharp-witted blogger who delights in poking holes in the legitimacy of the physicians and scientists who support the thesis that vaccines cause autism.
Shoemaker filed the subpoena only hours after Seidel listed his payments in a series of vaccine court cases, in a piece she titled "The Commerce of Causation." Shoemaker's subpoena, filed in the case of the child of a the Rev. Lisa Sykes, an anti-vaccine lobbyist and Methodist minister, commands production of "all documents pertaining to the setup, financing, running, research, maintaining the website neurodiversity, including bank statements, cancelled checks, emails, etc., between Seidel and anybody remotely associated with her, including "religious groups (Muslim or otherwise)."
Gas prices and profits are largely out of their control, oil executives tell Congress.
I blogged yesterday on a response from a former employee of the Agency for Toxic Substances to our report on the CDC agency. Former ATSDR official John Steward talked about the problems that can be associated with linking public health problems to environmental factors. He took issue specifically with our report's suggestion that polycythemia vera clusters in eastern Penn. are linked to environmental causes.
I pointed out that polycythemia vera, a very rare form of blood cancer, is not a genetic disorder, as Steward suggested, even though it can result from a genetic mutation -- in the JAK2 gene. According to the National Institute of Health, it is not passed from parent to child.
Geneticist Dante Picciano emailed me responding to yesterday's post. He explained the scientific difference between an inherited genetic disorder and a genetic mutation:
The growth hormone gets an extra gallon of milk out of a cow each day, but it's also been linked to health problems in humans.
While the FDA remains a troubled, underfunded agency, the White House is pushing to shield industry by blocking consumers from their last resort -- filing a lawsuit.