In the News

# results: 26-50 of 247
Show items per page
Date In The News Topic
Sep 15, 2011

''CDC awards Davidson health grant''

"The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention awarded Davidson a $350,000 grant to study healthy community initiatives over the next three years, Planning Manager Lauren Blackburn announced in Roosevelt Wilson Park on Friday, Sept. 9."

More

Health Impact Assessment
Nov 8, 2011

''Centers for Disease Control and Prevention''

"New funding will give city and county officials a chance to better understand how policy decisions might affect residents’ health in areas including public transportation and access to healthy foods."

More

Health Impact Assessment
Oct 20, 2011

''Change Your Neighborhood, Improve Your Health''

"When a U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD) offered a program in the 1990s to move families out of poor neighborhoods, it created a unique opportunity not only to improve people’s day-to-day lives, but also to study how a change in environment might impact their health over the long term."

More

Health Impact Assessment
Jul 23, 2012

Chefs Highlight Need to End Overuse of Antibiotics in Food Animal Production

Celebrity chefs and restaurateurs Suzanne Goin and Mary Sue Milliken, who serve only antibiotic-free meat in their establishments, came to Washington, D.C., on May 15 to tell the Administration and their representatives in Congress to rein in the overuse and misuse of antibiotics in food animal production.

More

Antibiotics in Food Animal Production
Nov 1, 2012

Chicago Public Schools: Serving Meat Raised Without Antibiotics

This November, the Chicago Public School System celebrate the one-year anniversary of the announcment that it would begin serving chicken raised without antibiotics to students in its 473 schools.

More

Antibiotics in Food Animal Production
Dec 6, 2011

''Childhood Obesity Best Battled in Schools, Research Finds''

"Australian researchers examined 55 interventions in previous studies and concluded that school-based programs were key in getting kids to healthy weights, and there was little evidence that these programs would have a negative effect on young students' self-images."

More

School Food
Apr 17, 2012

''Citing contamination, FDA aims to shut down 2 state fish processors''

"Government health and food safety officials are seeking to close down two fish processing plants in California, citing concerns over the spread of bacteria and toxins in contaminated products."

More

Food Hazards
Dec 5, 2011

''Clark County bike-walk plan earns national award for fighting obesity''

"In a press release, Clark County Public Health announced it received Active Living Research’s 2012 Translating Research to Policy Award for its Health Impact Assessment of the Clark County Bicycle and Pedestrian Plan."

More

Health Impact Assessment
Nov 15, 2011

Commentary: ''N.Y. has to really study gas drilling impact''

"When Gov. Andrew Cuomo said he would let science and health concerns drive his decision about issuing permits for hydraulic fracturing natural gas wells, we were encouraged. When we read the draft Supplemental Generic Environmental Impact Statement prepared by the state Department of Environmental Conservation, however, that encouragement evaporated."

More

Health Impact Assessment
Dec 9, 2011

Congress Weakens USDA’s Plan to Improve School Meals

In January, the U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA) proposed a plan to update school meal nutrition standards for the first time in 15 years. The proposal would ensure schools serve more fruits, vegetables and whole-grains while limiting calories, salt and fat. Some members of Congress raised concerns with two key provisions.

More

School Food
Feb 11, 2012

''Consumer group urges FDA to make oysters safe''

"Between April and November, about 30 Americans will get seriously sick and about 15 will die after eating raw oysters or other shellfish contaminated with deadly Vibrio vulnificus bacteria."

More

Food Hazards
Jan 24, 2012

''Could Rising Healthcare and Utility Bills Get Kentucky Off Coal?''

"The Health Impact Assessment on Coal and Clean Energy Options in Kentucky, prepared by the Kentucky Environmental Foundation collates all the available peer-reviewed reports on the health impacts of both coal production and various types of renewable energy production, in an attempt to encourage legislators who have historically ignored the environmental impact of coal to take a look at the health impacts associated with various energy production decisions."

More

Health Impact Assessment
Jan 2, 2012

''County may look at health impacts of bus transfers''

"County commissioners will consider a proposal Thursday morning asking the Oregon Health Authority for $15,000 to study the impact of TriMet’s bus/train transfer times."

More

Health Impact Assessment
Mar 24, 2012

''Court orders FDA action on antibiotic use on farms''

"WASHINGTON (AP) A federal court judge has ordered the Food and Drug Administration to take action on its own 35 year old rule that would stop farmers from mixing popular antibiotics into animal feed ..."

More

Antibiotics in Food Animal Production
Mar 23, 2012

''Court orders FDA to examine antibiotics use on animals''

"A federal court on Thursday ordered the FDA to follow through on a 35 year old proposal that would have banned the use of certain antibiotics in animal feed ... "

More

Antibiotics in Food Animal Production
Nov 21, 2011

''Criminal charges hard to pin on farm where listeria-tainted cantaloupes originated''

"Jensen Farms and its owners remain under threat of criminal prosecution for the cantaloupe listeria outbreak that has killed 29 people, but the history of even the most scandalous food poisonings shows such charges are rare."

More

Food Hazards
Jun 23, 2010

''Debate Over Industry Role in Educating Doctors''

"In the latest effort to break up the often cozy relationship between doctors and the medical industry, the University of Michigan Medical School has become the first to decide that it will no longer take any money from drug and device makers to pay for coursework doctors need to renew their medical licenses."

More

Conflicts of Interest
Aug 25, 2011

''Del Monte Sues FDA Over Cantaloupe Recall, Import Restrictions''

In an unusual move, Del Monte Fresh Produce has filed suit against the U.S. Food and Drug Administration saying "erroneous speculation, unsupported by scientific evidence" led to a March recall of Guatemalan cantaloupes tied to an outbreak of Salmonella Panama.

More

Food Safety
Mar 14, 2012

''Disease Outbreaks Linked to Imported Foods Rising: U.S.''

"The frequency of disease outbreaks linked to imported food is rising, with fish and spices the most-common source of illness, a U.S. health agency said."

More

Food Hazards
Nov 9, 2012

Dispatch from Denmark

Laura Rogers, project director for the Pew Campaign on Human Health and Industrial Farming, is in Denmark this week meeting with farmers, government officials and public health experts to learn how the United States can adapt the country’s successful model.

More

Antibiotics in Food Animal Production
Oct 6, 2010

''Dr. Oz: What's In the Nation's Chicken''

''Please take a moment to watch Dr. Oz revealing exactly what's in your chicken.''

More

Health Topics, Antibiotics in Food Animal Production
Jul 11, 2008

''Drug industry tightens rules on gift-giving''

"The trade association for drug companies announced yesterday a tightening of its voluntary code restricting industry gifts to doctors, even as the association has been forcefully lobbying against a tougher ban that is likely to be debated in the Massachusetts House next week."

More

Conflicts of Interest
Nov 26, 2010

''Drug Maker Cited on Quality Issues''

"Months after McNeil Consumer Healthcare, a unit of Johnson & Johnson, recalled millions of bottles of Tylenol and other over-the-counter drugs, the division is still plagued with manufacturing flaws, according to the Food and Drug Administration."

More

Drug Manufacturing and Distribution, Drug Safety
Dec 10, 2012

''Drug Overuse in Cattle Imperils Human Health''

"Two kids seriously injured in the Joplin, Mo., tornado in May 2011 showed up at Children’s Mercy Hospital in Kansas City suffering from antibiotic-resistant infections from dirt and debris blown into their wounds. Physicians tried different drugs, but at first nothing seemed to work. Blame the overuse of antibiotics in livestock, according to the doctors familiar with their cases."

More

Antibiotics in Food Animal Production
Mar 31, 2011

''Drug theft goes big''

"Organized gangs are stealing prescription medicine in increasingly audacious heists. That's a problem for Big Pharma and for patients, who can unknowingly buy stolen -- and sometimes dangerous -- medications."

More

Drug Manufacturing and Distribution, Drug Safety