Lawyer for Nigeria: Pfizer settlement close

0 comments

Posted on 26th February 2009 by Gordon Johnson in Uncategorized

, , , , , , ,

Date: 2/26/2009

By EDWARD HARRIS
Associated Press Writer

LAGOS, Nigeria (AP) — A lawyer representing Nigeria in multi-billion dollar lawsuits against Pfizer said Thursday that a settlement is close in the cases stemming from the pharmaceutical giant’s 1996 drug trial.

Nigerian authorities allege that Pfizer conducted illegal meningitis-drug experiments, resulting in deaths, brain damage, paralysis and slurred speech in many of the children involved in the 1996 study. Pfizer denies the charge and says its scientists acted lawfully and in keeping with professional standards.

Babatunde Irukera, the lawyer representing Nigeria, told The Associated Press that he was not at liberty to disclose the terms of any settlement. He said a deal could be announced within hours, although it would likely take several more days since Pfizer had yet to give the government any formal notification of a decision.

“It looks like we’re on the verge of an agreement. I have reason to believe that we’re very close,” said the lawyer, who is representing the Nigerian federal government.

Pfizer spokesman Chris Loder said the settlement process was continuing and that the company was willing to stay at the negotiating table until an agreement was reached.

“We continue to be interested in an amicable settlement that would help improve and expand health care for the people of Nigeria,” he told the AP in an e-mailed statement.

A case launched by Nigeria’s federal government is seeking $7 billion in damages, while a separate case stemming from the same study, brought by Kano state where the study took place, seeks $2 billion. Pfizer officials from the time of the study have also been subjected to criminal charges in Nigeria.

Irukera said any settlement would cover all parties to cases against Pfizer in Nigeria, and that negotiations were being led by former Nigerian military ruler Yakubu Gowon.

Last month, a New York-based court ruled that Nigerian families can sue Pfizer in U.S. courts, overturning rulings by a lower court judge who had tossed out the lawsuits in litigation that began in 2001. It was unclear if any settlement reached in Nigeria would include that legal challenge.

Pfizer treated 100 meningitis-infected children with an experimental antibiotic called Trovan. Another 100 children, who were control patients in the study, received an approved antibiotic, ceftriaxone — but the dose was lower than recommended, the family attorneys allege.

As many as 11 children in the study died, while others suffered physical disabilities and brain damage. Pfizer has insisted its records show that none of the deaths was linked to Trovan or substandard treatment, noting that the study showed a better survival rate for the patients on Trovan than those on the standard drug, and that mental damage and other serious disabilities are known aftereffects of meningitis.

Authorities in Kano state have blamed the Pfizer affair for widespread suspicion of government public health policies and for helping fuel a drive by local Islamic leaders who briefly halted polio vaccination efforts in northern Nigeria.

Copyright 2009 The Associated Press.


Attorney Gordon Johnson
Chair Traumatic Brain Injury Litigation Group, American Association of Justice
g@gordonjohnson.com :: 800-992-9447 :: Attorney Gordon S. Johnson, Jr.

http://subtlebraininjury.com :: http://brainanatomyguide.com :: http://car-accident-rain.com :: http://tbilaw.com
http://waiting.com :: http://vestibulardisorder.com :: http://youtube.com/profile?user=braininjuryattorney

Tylenol victims' families wait for break, again

0 comments

Posted on 25th February 2009 by Gordon Johnson in Uncategorized

, , , , ,

Date: 2/25/2009

By DON BABWIN
Associated Press Writer

CHICAGO (AP) — Michelle Rosen hoped a Boston-area FBI raid this month meant she might finally be able to stop wondering if the grocery bagger or the gardener down the block could be responsible for killing her mother and six others who swallowed cyanide-laced Tylenol decades ago.

But in the three weeks since the raid, nothing.

Not a word from law enforcement or a news conference to discuss possible evidence seized from the Cambridge, Mass., apartment belonging to James W. Lewis — long considered the main suspect in the Chicago-area crime that terrified the nation in 1982.

Despite a flurry of speculation that the case could be verging on conclusion, Rosen fears she’s no closer to answering the question that’s plagued her since her mother collapsed in front of her when she was 8 years old.

“You find yourself thinking if they had anything, he’d be locked up by now somehow,” Rosen said. “I would have thought by now, with the whole world watching, you would have made an arrest immediately if you had something.”

At the time of the Feb. 4 raid, officials were telling family members for the first time in years that they may be onto something.

“I was hoping, I really was,” said Rosen, of the Chicago suburb of Winfield. “This was the first time they’d knocked on anybody’s doors.”

On Tuesday, FBI Special Agent Frank Bochte in Chicago said agents are examining evidence in the case, but there were no arrests or developments to announce.

It’s been a tough month for families given a glimmer of hope in the case that triggered a nationwide scare and prompted dramatic changes in the way food and medical products are packaged.

The spotlight’s return to Lewis is reminiscent of the months after the slayings, when he was charged with sending a letter to Tylenol’s manufacturer demanding $1 million to “stop the killing.” He was convicted of extortion, but never charged in the slayings. Combined with a mail fraud conviction in an unrelated credit card scheme, Lewis spent 12 years in prison.

Many family members had long ago given up on their loved ones’ killer ever being brought to justice.

“I was hoping this was not just something to stir up a lot of interest and lead to nothing,” said Robert Tarasewicz.

Tarasewicz, who was 17 when his 19-year-old sister died along with her husband and brother-in-law after all three took pills from the same Extra-Strength Tylenol bottle, conceded he didn’t necessarily expect a quick arrest after the raid on Lewis’ apartment.

“This isn’t a one-hour TV show,” said Tarasewicz, of Lisle, outside Chicago. But “if something doesn’t happen in the next couple of months, I will start to wonder what’s happening.”

At the same time, Tarasewicz said he is not going to get his hopes too high only to find himself, like his father, devastated again about his sister’s death.

“They never recovered,” Tarasewicz said of his parents. “My mom passed away and my dad is still alive. It doesn’t take much for him to think about it and get some tears.”

Jack Eliason — whose 31-year-old sister, Mary McFarland, was among those killed — is trying to take an equally measured approach.

“I think a month or two is reasonable,” Eliason said of how long he might wait before this chapter in the story starts to feel as empty as those that marked the slayings’ many anniversaries.

Like Tarasewicz, Eliason had come to believe he would never learn who killed his sister. Then he watched as FBI agents marched across his television screen, carrying boxes and a computer from Lewis’ home.

Eliason said he always was skeptical Lewis was responsible, thinking it was more likely he was a con man.

But now, “I’m sure just to get a judge to allow them to go and actually have a search warrant and seize whatever they took out (of Lewis’ home) they had to have something, probable cause,” he said.

Eliason was further encouraged when the FBI called him after the search to ask him if he’d be interested in getting updates.

He’s still waiting for his first one.

“I got the initial letter and haven’t heard anything since,” he said.

When investigators do contact him, no matter what they say, Eliason now knows there is a chance me might someday learn the truth.

“If they say no evidence, the search goes on,” he said.

Copyright 2009 The Associated Press.


Attorney Gordon Johnson
Chair Traumatic Brain Injury Litigation Group, American Association of Justice
g@gordonjohnson.com :: 800-992-9447 :: Attorney Gordon S. Johnson, Jr.

http://subtlebraininjury.com :: http://brainanatomyguide.com :: http://car-accident-rain.com :: http://tbilaw.com
http://waiting.com :: http://vestibulardisorder.com :: http://youtube.com/profile?user=braininjuryattorney

Big asbestos case in Libby, Mont., goes to trial

0 comments

Posted on 22nd February 2009 by Gordon Johnson in Uncategorized

, , , , , , ,

Date: 2/22/2009

By NICHOLAS K. GERANIOS
Associated Press Writer

MISSOULA, Mont. (AP) — After years of delays, the people of a Montana mining town are getting their day in court to see a major chemical company face federal charges accusing it of poisoning their homes and schools with asbestos.

Opening statements are scheduled for Monday in the case of U.S. vs. W.R. Grace and Co. and five of its executives, who are charged with knowingly exposing the residents of the small town of Libby to the fibrous mineral linked to cancer.

Prosecutors have had to overcome legal challenges that went all the way to the U.S. Supreme Court.

“This trial is one of the most complex and creative criminal prosecutions in the history of environmental regulation,” said Andrew King-Ries, an assistant professor at the University of Montana School of Law.

The case stems from the mining for vermiculite from Zonolite Mountain near Libby, which began around 1920 and continued until 1990. The mineral could be processed into products used for plumbing insulation, fireproofing and gardening. Zonolite brand insulation is in some 35 million homes in the United States.

The problem is that the vermiculite from the Libby mine was contaminated with naturally occurring asbestos mineral fibers, which can be inhaled and can cause mesothelioma, asbestosis and lung cancer.

Lawyers for Libby residents contend the pollution has killed some 225 people and sickened about 2,000 in the area.

U.S. District Judge Donald Molloy has placed a gag order on the parties involved, but court documents set the stage.

“The defendants in this case knew the dangers of asbestos they released into the Libby, Montana air, yet they concealed the dangers, putting local residents at risk while enriching themselves,” prosecutors said in their trial brief.

Lawyers for W.R. Grace, based in Columbia, Md., deny there was any conspiracy to knowingly release asbestos, and also contend that most of the releases occurred years before an applicable law was passed in 1990.

“The government has illogically charged that the defendants conspired in 1976 to violate a statute that would not exist for another 14 years,” Grace said in its trial brief.

The case has outraged many people in Montana, which has a long history of environmental and economic exploitation by giant corporations that extracted wealth while leaving behind their messes. Many are impatient with the delays that Grace has sought through numerous appeals.

“Folks in Libby have suffered long enough,” U.S. Sen. Jon Tester, D-Mont., told The Associated Press. “It’s well past time for the wheels of justice to get rolling.”

Libby is a town of about 2,600 people located in a forested valley of the Cabinet Mountains, about 100 miles northwest of Missoula, Mont.

Kristine Paulsen, a Libby native who wrote a master’s thesis on how townspeople are coping with the pollution, said many locals are unsure how to react to the start of a trial that is expected to last for months.

“They want to get their hopes up, but they’ve gotten their hopes up so many times it is hard to do anymore,” Paulsen said. “The things that happened to these people are just so terrible.”

Tiny particles of the ore got into homes on the clothes of miners. It was also taken to processing plants in Libby, one of which was located next to a baseball field. The mill smokestack released up to 24,000 pounds of dust a day. Asbestos-contaminated mine tailings were used to build running tracks at local junior high and high schools, and lined an elementary school skating rink.

After news reports of health problems, the Environmental Protection Agency in 1999 sent an emergency team to Libby to collect information about asbestos contamination, and the town was declared a Superfund cleanup site in 2002

“There were visible flakes of vermiculite everywhere,” said Dr. Charlie Weis, an EPA toxicologist, at a recent pretrial hearing.

A federal indictment unsealed in February 2005 charged Grace and its former executives with violating the federal Clean Air Act and obstructing an EPA investigation into the asbestos contamination.

The legal issue is whether W.R. Grace, which bought the mine in 1963, and its co-defendants knew of the health risks associated with the mine for years before federal regulators arrived. The government contends the company and some of its managers conspired to hide health risks from its workers.

In addition to Grace, the defendants are five retired executives. All face up to 15 years in prison and fines totaling millions of dollars. They are free on their own recognizance.

A sixth defendant, company attorney O. Mario Favorito has been severed from the case and will be tried separately because nearly all of his conduct is protected by Grace’s attorney-client privilege, Molloy has ruled. A former mine manager also was indicted but has died.

In 2006, Molloy made a series of rulings that disallowed some evidence and witnesses, damaging the government’s case. Prosecutors appealed and the 9th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals reversed Molloy’s decisions.

Grace appealed to the U.S. Supreme Court, which last June refused to overturn the 9th Circuit and sent the case back to Molloy.

Grace and some of the executives are also charged with knowing endangerment for providing contaminated material to the community for various uses such as the running tracks. Grace is also charged with obstruction of justice for hampering EPA’s assessment and cleanup efforts.

Lawyers for W.R. Grace contend the Clean Air Act’s knowing endangerment provision was enacted on Nov. 15, 1990, while prosecutors are seeking to punish the company for actions dating back to 1976.

“If there is no substantive federal offense, there can be no conspiracy,” Grace argues.

___

On the Web:

University of Montana trial blog: http://blog.umt.edu/gracecase

W.R. Grace: http://www.grace.com/

Copyright 2009 The Associated Press.


Attorney Gordon Johnson
Chair Traumatic Brain Injury Litigation Group, American Association of Justice
g@gordonjohnson.com :: 800-992-9447 :: Attorney Gordon S. Johnson, Jr.

http://subtlebraininjury.com :: http://brainanatomyguide.com :: http://car-accident-rain.com :: http://tbilaw.com
http://waiting.com :: http://vestibulardisorder.com :: http://youtube.com/profile?user=braininjuryattorney

Symptoms of food poisoning and advice

0 comments

Posted on 19th February 2009 by Gordon Johnson in Uncategorized

Date: 2/19/2009

By The Associated Press

About 1 in 4 Americans suffer from food poisoning each year. How do you know if you have it? What should you do to take care of yourself? When should you see a doctor?

Symptoms are serious diarrhea that lasts at least a day and possible nausea, vomiting and/or stomach cramps.

Don’t get dehydrated. Drinks like CeraLyte, Pedialyte or Oralyte can help. (Sports drinks like Gatorade are not sufficient.) Pepto-Bismol and similar aids can reduce diarrhea’s severity.

See a doctor if you experience any of these problems:

— Temperature of 101.5 degrees.

— Blood in stool.

— Prolonged vomiting.

— Dizzines, decreased urination or other signs of dehydration.

— Diarrhea that lasts more than three days.

___

Source: Centers for Disease Control and Prevention

Copyright 2009 The Associated Press.


Attorney Gordon Johnson
Chair Traumatic Brain Injury Litigation Group, American Association of Justice
g@gordonjohnson.com :: 800-992-9447 :: Attorney Gordon S. Johnson, Jr.

http://subtlebraininjury.com :: http://brainanatomyguide.com :: http://car-accident-rain.com :: http://tbilaw.com
http://waiting.com :: http://vestibulardisorder.com :: http://youtube.com/profile?user=braininjuryattorney

FDA says 3 deaths associated with Genentech drug

0 comments

Posted on 19th February 2009 by Gordon Johnson in Uncategorized

, , , ,

Date: 2/19/2009

By MATTHEW PERRONE
AP Business Writer

WASHINGTON (AP) — Three patients taking a Genentech drug are believed to have died of a rare brain infection, a known risk with the skin-clearing treatment, according to federal health officials.

The Food and Drug Administration on Thursday confirmed three cases and a possible fourth of progressive multifocal leukoencephalopathy, or PML, which causes swelling of the brain and is usually fatal. All the cases were reported in the last six months.

The FDA announcement came the same day that European Union regulators recommended a ban on marketing the drug. The European Medicines Agency stated “the benefits of Raptiva no longer outweigh its risks, because of safety concerns.”

The drug is marketed in Europe by Swiss drugmaker Merck Serono.

The FDA said two U.S. patients who were diagnosed with the disease died, as did the additional patient who was believed to have the disease, but was never diagnosed.

Genentech previously notified physicians and investors of the cases.

“We take the risk of PML very seriously and are working diligently with the FDA to put the right plans in place that will help protect patient safety,” said company spokeswoman Tara Cooper.

First approved in 2003, Raptiva is a once-a-week injection used to treat red, scaly skin caused by psoriasis.

The FDA in October added its most serious warning to Raptiva, after a 70-year-old patient caught PML and died after taking the drug for four years.

The agency stressed in a statement posted to its Web site Thursday that patients should be aware of the symptoms of the infection, which include weakness, blurred vision and difficulty speaking. Doctors should likewise monitor patients taking the drug for these signs, the FDA said.

PML is typically seen in patients with weakened immune systems, and previously has been reported in patients taking Rituxan, a blockbuster arthritis and cancer drug marketed by Genentech and Biogen Idec.

Shares of Genentech added 6 cents to close at $84.76.

Copyright 2009 The Associated Press.


Attorney Gordon Johnson
Chair Traumatic Brain Injury Litigation Group, American Association of Justice
g@gordonjohnson.com :: 800-992-9447 :: Attorney Gordon S. Johnson, Jr.

http://subtlebraininjury.com :: http://brainanatomyguide.com :: http://car-accident-rain.com :: http://tbilaw.com
http://waiting.com :: http://vestibulardisorder.com :: http://youtube.com/profile?user=braininjuryattorney

Food poisoning strikes 1 in 4 Americans each year

0 comments

Posted on 19th February 2009 by Gordon Johnson in Uncategorized

, , , ,

Date: 2/19/2009

By MIKE STOBBE
AP Medical Writer

ATLANTA (AP) — Next time you have a case of diarrhea that lasts a day or more, chances are better than one in three that it was food poisoning.

As many as a quarter of Americans suffer a foodborne illness each year — though only a fraction of those cases get linked to high-profile outbreaks like the recent salmonella-peanut scare, according to the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

“Outbreaks are dramatic instances,” says Dr. Robert Tauxe, a CDC expert on the subject. But they highlight a health threat that many people exaggerate and misunderstand, according to some experts.

Scientists have counted more than 250 food-related types of illness — from viruses to bacteria to parasites. Most common are Norwalk-like viruses — famous for sickening cruise-ship passengers. They account for about two-thirds of known food-poisoning cases, according to the CDC.

Two types of bacteria, campylobacter and salmonella, are the next most common. Campylobacter is blamed for about 14 percent of food poisonings, salmonella for roughly 10 percent.

The exact toll of these and other bugs is not really known.

Ten years ago, a team of CDC scientists put together the best enduring estimate of how many Americans get food poisoning each year: 76 million illnesses, which resulted in 325,000 hospitalizations and 5,000 deaths.

No more recent figures are available. But the current numbers must be close to 87 million cases, 371,000 hospitalizations and 5,700 deaths, according to an Associated Press calculation that used the CDC formula and current population estimates.

The statistics seem even more alarming in the context of a parade of high-profile food-poisoning outbreaks in recent years: salmonella poisoning linked to hot peppers and tomatoes from Mexico that sickened more 1,400 last year; an E. coli outbreak from bagged spinach in 2006; and even deadly cases of hepatitis A from green onions in 2003.

The recent peanut-related salmonella outbreak has caused more than 640 confirmed illnesses in 44 states and been linked to nine deaths. It was traced to a Virginia-based company, Peanut Corp. of America, which makes minor-label peanut butter, peanut paste and other products.

Those numbers just scratch the surface: A case is confirmed only after a lab test is sent to the CDC. Many sick people just soldier on without even seeing a doctor.

Health officials assume that for every salmonella case, there are three dozen unreported cases. By that calculation, the latest peanut-related outbreak actually has sickened closer to 20,000 people.

But the problem could be a lot worse.

The number of confirmed food poisonings has basically held steady in recent years. It may seem worse because more advanced testing allows investigators to better link cases and identify outbreaks, CDC officials said.

Also, despite sometimes dramatic problems in food production and inspections, the U.S. food supply is still considered one of the safest in the world, several experts said.

Food poisoning affects an estimated 25 percent of Americans every year. That compares with roughly 30 percent of people in industrialized countries, according to the World Health Organization. The toll, of course, is much higher in developing countries, where diarrheal diseases are a major cause of death for children.

But not all of our food comes from within our borders, as demonstrated by last summer’s vegetable-caused outbreak.

“I usually say it is one of the safest in the world,” said Tauxe, when asked about the U.S. food supply. “But increasingly, our food supply is the world.”

Patients suffering gastric distress sometimes assume food poisoning, partly because of all the outbreak news and partly because it’s human nature, some doctors said.

“I think a lot of people in general say, ‘I have symptoms. I must have eaten something that’s caused this,’” said Dr. Andi Shane, a pediatric infectious disease specialist at Atlanta’s Emory University.

Patients may not consider an infection came from some other means, like handling a contaminated tissue, she said.

Some may also find the latest outbreak unsettling because it involved a prepackaged food like peanut butter, said Dr. Akiko Kimura, an epidemiologist with the California Department of Public Health.

“It’s ready-to-eat, and so there wasn’t anything the consumer could do,” she said.

Food disease investigators say their experience has made them careful to wash their hands, review restaurant inspection reports and think carefully about the foods they eat.

“I am fond of many foods, but I draw the line at eating raw meat and raw poultry, raw oysters and raw unpasteurized eggs,” said the CDC’s Tauxe.

“I run the cutting boards through our dishwasher,” he added.

___

On the Net:

CDC’s frequently asked questions on foodborne illness: http://tinyurl.com/2fpjx

Copyright 2009 The Associated Press.


Attorney Gordon Johnson
Chair Traumatic Brain Injury Litigation Group, American Association of Justice
g@gordonjohnson.com :: 800-992-9447 :: Attorney Gordon S. Johnson, Jr.

http://subtlebraininjury.com :: http://brainanatomyguide.com :: http://car-accident-rain.com :: http://tbilaw.com
http://waiting.com :: http://vestibulardisorder.com :: http://youtube.com/profile?user=braininjuryattorney

China investigating kidney ailments in babies

0 comments

Posted on 19th February 2009 by Gordon Johnson in Uncategorized

, , , , , ,

Date: 2/19/2009

By AUDRA ANG
Associated Press Writer

BEIJING (AP) — Chinese health officials are investigating a growing number of cases of kidney stones in babies, state media said Thursday, months after a tainted milk scandal in which hundreds of thousands of children who drank melamine-contaminated formula suffered similar ailments.

While the Health Ministry has not directly linked the new cases to dairy products, parents are blaming formula made by Dumex Baby Food Co. Ltd., a subsidiary of France’s Groupe Danone SA. Dumex insists that its products are safe, and health officials said tests showed they are free of melamine, an industrial chemical.

The China Daily newspaper said Thursday that the Health Ministry has asked all local health bureaus to begin epidemiological research on kidney problems in children, including checking their eating habits and living environment.

“We’re trying to find out why the number of kidney ailments among babies has risen drastically,” Ma Yangchen of the ministry’s press office was quoted as saying. The report did not say how many children have become sick, when they became ill or what triggered the investigation.

A woman who answered the telephone at the Health Ministry said there was no official statement on the matter.

The ministry’s investigation reflects government efforts to restore public confidence after milk tainted with melamine, used in the production of plastics and fertilizer, was linked to the deaths last year of at least six Chinese babies and illnesses of nearly 300,000 others.

The scandal, which unfolded in September, was one of the country’s worst food contamination crises. It involved the products of China’s biggest dairies and underscored the government’s problems with policing product quality.

State media have said that officials started looking into Dumex because of overseas media reports last month that about 48 Chinese babies suffered kidney-related illnesses after drinking the company’s milk. It did not identify the reports.

Dumex has insisted that all its products are safe. The Shanghai Municipal Bureau of Quality and Technical Supervision said over the weekend it had tested 932 batches of dairy products produced by the Danone subsidiary since mid-September “and all are melamine-free.”

It also said no melamine was found in more than 1,700 batches produced before mid-September, when the dairy scandal broke.

Dumex’s main China office in Shanghai had no immediate comment Thursday.

Jiang Yalin, a mother in the southwestern province of Guizhou and the leader of a parents’ group, said her daughter drank only Dumex milk after she turned 1 and fell sick about two months later. She cried constantly at night, even in her sleep, and started having problems urinating, Jiang said.

When Jiang took her daughter to the hospital in September after reading about the tainted milk scandal, doctors said the child had stones as big as rice grains in both her kidneys.

“I was stunned. I felt helpless and angry,” Jiang said in a telephone interview.

The girl has since recovered and Jiang says doctors have declared her healthy.

Jiang said she has compiled a list of more than 100 babies — the youngest only a couple of months old — who fell sick after drinking Dumex and may file a suit against the company.

“I must figure out what exactly it was that harmed my daughter. I must know,” Jiang said.

___

Associated Press researcher Xi Yue contributed to this report.

Copyright 2009 The Associated Press.


Attorney Gordon Johnson
Chair Traumatic Brain Injury Litigation Group, American Association of Justice
g@gordonjohnson.com :: 800-992-9447 :: Attorney Gordon S. Johnson, Jr.

http://subtlebraininjury.com :: http://brainanatomyguide.com :: http://car-accident-rain.com :: http://tbilaw.com
http://waiting.com :: http://vestibulardisorder.com :: http://youtube.com/profile?user=braininjuryattorney

US calls for treaty on mercury reduction

0 comments

Posted on 16th February 2009 by Gordon Johnson in Uncategorized

, , , , , , , ,

Date: 2/16/2009

By TOM MALITI
Associated Press Writer

NAIROBI, Kenya (AP) — The Obama administration reversed years of U.S. policy Monday by calling for a treaty to cut mercury pollution, which it described as the world’s gravest chemical problem.

Some 6,000 tons of mercury enter the environment each year, about a third generated by power stations and coal fires. Much settles into the oceans where it enters the food chain and is concentrated in predatory fish like tuna.

Children and fetuses are particularly vulnerable to poisoning by the toxic metal, which can cause birth defects, brain damage and peeling skin.

Daniel Reifsnyder, the deputy assistant secretary of state for environment and sustainable development, told a global gathering of environmental ministers in Nairobi, Kenya, that the U.S wants negotiations on limiting mercury to begin this year and conclude within three.

“We’re prepared to help lead in developing a globally legally binding instrument,” he said. “It is clear mercury is the most important global chemical issue facing us today that calls for immediate action.”

The statement represented a “180-degree turnaround” from policy under the Bush administration, said Michael Bender, co-coordinator of the Zero Mercury Working Group, a global coalition of 75 environmental organizations working to reduce mercury exposure.

“The change is like night and day. The Bush administration opposed any international legal agreements on mercury and President (Barack) Obama is in office less than one month and is already supporting a global agreement,” he said.

Bender said his group has had more discussions over mercury control in the past two weeks than they have in the last eight years and that the U.S. government included many of their ideas in the proposal they are presented in Nairobi.

Mercury is also widely used in chemical production and small-scale mining. The toxin can travel thousands of miles through the air or water.

America’s Food and Drug Administration advises expectant mothers to limit weekly consumption to six ounces of albacore tuna or 12 ounces of “light” tuna, the health effects of which are still being scientifically debated. California authorities have been locked in a five-year legal battle to force tuna companies to paste warning labels on their product about potentially harmful mercury levels.

Despite the warnings, there’s often little public knowledge of the dangers of mercury in seafood. In the American state of Idaho, a food bank distributed as much as 96 ounces of fish in family food baskets last summer. That’s 48 times more than a child weighing less than 30 pounds is advised to eat monthly, according to the Health and Welfare advisory.

There is even less awareness in developing countries, where small-scale miners use mercury to pan for gold and fishermen eat contaminated fish or sell it to chic sushi restaurants.

“Murky? Maki?” asked Peter Omoga, manager at a Japanese restaurant in the Kenyan capital, when asked about mercury levels by an Associated Press correspondent tucking into a sushi feast.

While substitutes exist for almost all industrial processes that require mercury, more than 50 percent of mercury emissions come from coal-fueled power plants, complicating efforts to regulate it in countries that rely on coal for power.

A U.S.-drafted proposal obtained by The Associated Press would form a negotiating committee in conjunction with the U.N. environment program to help countries reduce their mercury use, clean up contaminated sites and find environmentally sound ways to store mercury. The European Union has already banned mercury exports starting in 2011. The U.S. has a similar ban that will be effective 2013, legislation that was sponsored by Obama when he was a U.S. senator.

Advocacy groups that have been working on getting such a global pact passed welcomed the U.S. policy change, saying it could encourage other countries such as Canada to make a similar change. Bender said mercury levels in the world had increased two to three times over the past 200 years.

“Given that the United States has pushed the door of resistance in a sense, that will lead others to follow,” said Susan Egan Keane of the Washington, D.C.-based Natural Resources Defense Council.

___

Associated Press Writer Katharine Houreld in Nairobi, Kenya, contributed to this report.

Copyright 2009 The Associated Press.


Attorney Gordon Johnson
Chair Traumatic Brain Injury Litigation Group, American Association of Justice
g@gordonjohnson.com :: 800-992-9447 :: Attorney Gordon S. Johnson, Jr.

http://subtlebraininjury.com :: http://brainanatomyguide.com :: http://car-accident-rain.com :: http://tbilaw.com
http://waiting.com :: http://vestibulardisorder.com :: http://youtube.com/profile?user=braininjuryattorney

Does the United States make anything anymore?

0 comments

Posted on 16th February 2009 by Gordon Johnson in Uncategorized

, , , , , , , ,

Date: 2/16/2009

By STEPHEN MANNING
AP Business Writer

WASHINGTON (AP) — It may seem like the country that used to make everything is on the brink of making nothing.

In January, 207,000 U.S. manufacturing jobs vanished in the largest one-month drop since October 1982. Factory activity is hovering at a 28-year low. Even before the recession, plants were hemorrhaging work to foreign competitors with cheap labor. And some companies were moving production overseas.

But manufacturing in the United States isn’t dead or even dying. It’s moving upscale, following the biggest profits, and becoming more efficient, just like Henry Ford did when he created the assembly line to make the Model T.

The U.S. by far remains the world’s leading manufacturer by value of goods produced. It hit a record $1.6 trillion in 2007 — nearly double the $811 billion in 1987. For every $1 of value produced in China’s factories, America generates $2.50.

So what’s made in the USA these days?

The U.S. sold more than $200 billion worth of aircraft, missiles and space-related equipment in 2007. And $80 billion worth of autos and auto parts. Deere & Co., best known for its bright green and yellow tractors, sold $16.5 billion worth of farming equipment last year, much of it to the rest of the world. Then there’s energy products like gas turbines for power plants made by General Electric, computer chips from Intel and fighter jets from Lockheed Martin. Household names like GE, General Motors, IBM, Boeing, Hewlett-Packard are among the largest manufacturers by revenue.

Several trends have emerged over the decades:

— America makes things that other countries can’t. Today, “Made in USA” is more likely to be stamped on heavy equipment or the circuits that go inside other products than the TVs, toys, clothes and other items found on store shelves.

— U.S. companies have shifted toward high-end manufacturing as the production of low-value goods moves overseas. This has resulted in lower prices for shoppers and higher profits for companies.

— When demand slumps, all types of manufacturing jobs are lost. Some higher-end jobs — but not all — return with good times. Workers who make goods more cheaply produced overseas suffer.

Once this recession runs its course, surviving manufacturers will emerge more efficient and profitable, economists say. More valuable products will be made using fewer people. Products will be made where labor and other costs are cheaper. And manufacturers will focus on the most lucrative products.

Aircraft maker Boeing announced last month it was cutting about 10,000 jobs. At the same time, workers are streamlining the wing assembly for the 737, the company’s best-selling commercial plane, said Richard McCabe, a wing line mechanic for 10 years and former Machinists union shop steward.

He and his co-workers at the factory in suburban Renton, Wash., were asked about 3½ years ago to figure out how to switch from building wings in massive stationary jigs mounted vertically, “the way things have been done here forever,” to “one-piece flow,” assembling them horizontally on a moving line similar to automobiles. The new process is set to begin by the end of the year.

“I won’t go to the wing. The wing will come to me,” McCabe said. “It’s going to save them millions in scrap and rework.”

McCabe said there was a lot of initial resistance on the shop floor, but Boeing’s increased outsourcing — including wing production for the new 787 to Japan — helped change workers’ minds.

“I told the guys, it’s development or die,” McCabe said. “If we can get this done, it assures us the future.”

About 12.7 million Americans, or 8 percent of the labor force, still held manufacturing jobs as of last month. Fifty years ago, 14.6 million people, or 28 percent of all workers, toiled in factories. The numbers — though painful to those who lost jobs — show how companies are making more with less.

Still, the perception of decline is likely to grow as factories and jobs vanish, and imports rise for most goods we buy at stores.

Thirty years ago, U.S. producers made 80 percent of what the country consumed, according to the Manufacturers Alliance/MAPI, an industry trade group. Now it’s around 65 percent.

American factories still provide much of the processed food that Americans buy, everything from frozen fish sticks to cans of beer. And U.S. companies make a considerable share of the personal hygiene products like soap and shampoo, cleaning supplies, and prescription drugs that are sold in pharmacies. But many other consumer goods now come from overseas.

In the 1960s, America made 98 percent of its shoes. It now imports more than 90 percent of its footwear. The iconic red Radio Flyer wagons for kids are now made in China. Even Apple Inc.’s iPod comes in box that says it was made in China but “designed in California.”

“Some people lament the loss of manufacturing jobs we could have had making iPods. So what?” said Dan Ikenson, associate director of the Center for Trade Policy Studies at the libertarian-leaning Cato Institute. “The imports of iPods support U.S. jobs,” including engineers, marketers and advertisers.

Some U.S.-made products are hiding in plain sight.

Berner International Corp., based outside Pittsburgh, doesn’t make the clothes, dishes or sponges sold at Wal-Mart, but its products hang above shoppers’ heads as soon they come through the sliding doors.

The company’s 60 employees make air curtains — rectangular blowers mounted to the ceiling that keep out hot or chilly air, insects and dust while keeping in A/C and heat. Also called air doors, they hang from ceilings at Wal-Marts, Whole Foods, and Starbucks, and above the big factory doors at Ford and Toyota car plants.

Chief executive Georgia Berner keeps her company in the United States because she relies on her staff’s deep knowledge of air blowers, which are custom made for clients using metal plates, fans, motors and electronic parts assembled at the company’s 60,000-square-foot factory. Each box requires specific voltages and sizing, she says.

“I have a crew here (with) much of the product knowledge in (their) heads,” she said.

To deal with the recession, her production manager is making the factory more efficient by move shelves of parts closer to workers.

She’s also banking on a new line of air curtains for fast food drive through windows, noting that fast food demand is on the rise while other restaurants decline.

Other companies saddled with high labor costs — sometimes called legacy costs that insured workers high wages, pensions and handsome benefits — can struggle to survive.

In the early 1980s, the U.S. steel industry faced such pressure. Today, it’s the auto industry, which is pressuring its unions to agree to deep reductions in pay and generous benefits. In fact, it’s a condition of the $17.4 billion in emergency loans from the government to keep the industry in business.

But other American manufacturers — and workers — have adapted.

Judy Horkman, 47, of Manitowoc, Wis., was devastated when she was laid off after 13 years of attaching handles to saute pans on the Mirro Cookware plant assembly line. But two years ago, Horkman took a job making industrial light fixtures for office buildings and warehouses at Orion Energy Systems Inc. She makes $12.50 per hour — not quite the $13.80 she earned at Mirro, but Horkman says she is fine with that.

Horkman said she takes tremendous pride in her work. When she assembled cookware she imagined that she would personally use the final product. When she switched to making lighting, she was driven by the same Golden Rule.

“Regardless of my product I’d put my heart into it. I put my hard work, my dedication, my quality into whate
ver I make,” she said. “I just imagine someone out there really needs this, and I think about how good I’d want it to be if it was for me.”

___

Associated Press writers Tim Klass in Seattle, Dinesh Ramde in Milwaukee and David Brinkerhoff in New York contributed to this report.

Copyright 2009 The Associated Press.


Attorney Gordon Johnson
Chair Traumatic Brain Injury Litigation Group, American Association of Justice
g@gordonjohnson.com :: 800-992-9447 :: Attorney Gordon S. Johnson, Jr.

http://subtlebraininjury.com :: http://brainanatomyguide.com :: http://car-accident-rain.com :: http://tbilaw.com
http://waiting.com :: http://vestibulardisorder.com :: http://youtube.com/profile?user=braininjuryattorney

6 Colorado salmonella cases traced to Texas plant

0 comments

Posted on 15th February 2009 by Gordon Johnson in Uncategorized

, , , , , , ,

Date: 2/15/2009

PORTLAND, Ore. (AP) — Six salmonella cases in Colorado have been linked to tainted products from a shuttered Texas plant owned by the peanut processing company at the focal point of a national outbreak of the disease.

The Colorado Department of Public Health and Environment linked the cases to the Plainview Peanut Co. in the Texas Panhandle, The Oregonian newspaper in Portland reported Saturday. The Colorado victims were between the ages of 2 and 60. One had to be hospitalized, the newspaper reported.

The Plainview plant, owned by Peanut Corp. of America, had operated since 2005 without an inspection, authorities have said.

On Thursday, Texas health officials ordered the recall of all peanut-related ingredients ever shipped from the Plainview plant. Inspectors found dead rodents and feces, and preliminary tests by a private lab indicated salmonella was present.

A Texas health official confirmed Saturday that they knew come Colorado salmonella cases were possibly linked to the Plainview plant, which was shut down after the inspection.

“It’s certainly not a surprise to us,” said Doug McBride, spokesman for the Texas Department of State Health Services.

The salmonella cases in Colorado were traced to peanut butter from Lakewood-based Vitamin Cottage. The natural foods chain recalled its Vitamin Cottage Fresh-Ground Peanut butter last week.

Vitamin Cottage could not immediately be reached for comment Saturday evening.

In a statement last week, though, Vitamin Cottage officials said they’d been notified by Colorado authorities that three people had salmonella after eating the peanut butter in late December or early January. Vitamin Cottage has 25 stores in Colorado, plus stores in Texas, New Mexico and Utah.

The salmonella outbreak has sickened some 600 people in 43 states and is being linked to nine deaths. More than 1,900 products have been recalled, and Peanut Corp. of America is under FBI investigation and filed for bankruptcy Friday. Leading brands of jarred peanut butter are not affected.

Alicia Cronquist, epidemiologist at the Colorado Department of Public Health and Environment, told The Oregonian that 16 people in the state have been sickened by tainted peanut butter, six of them linked to peanut butter from Vitamin Cottage and the Texas plant.

___

On the Net:

Vitamin Cottage: http://www.vitamincottage.com

Colorado Department of Public Health and Environment: http://www.cdphe.state.co.us

Copyright 2009 The Associated Press.


Attorney Gordon Johnson
Chair Traumatic Brain Injury Litigation Group, American Association of Justice
g@gordonjohnson.com :: 800-992-9447 :: Attorney Gordon S. Johnson, Jr.

http://subtlebraininjury.com :: http://brainanatomyguide.com :: http://car-accident-rain.com :: http://tbilaw.com
http://waiting.com :: http://vestibulardisorder.com :: http://youtube.com/profile?user=braininjuryattorney