Media Coverage

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Apr 27, 2009

''U.S. Bracing For Swine Flu Pandemic''

''Confirming 42 cases of swine flu in the U.S., the Obama administration said Monday it was responding aggressively as if the outbreak would spread into a full pandemic.''

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Source: CBS News

Antibiotics in Food Animal Production
Jul 1, 2009

''Two States Restrict Firms' Gifts to Doctors''

"Under laws taking effect Wednesday in Massachusetts and Vermont, pharmaceutical companies and medical-device makers will be banned from giving doctors such gifts as resort trips or even coffee mugs."

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Source: The Wall Street Journal

Conflicts of Interest
Aug 23, 2012

''Turning Point: Sohini Ramachandran''

Sohini Ramachandran, a population geneticist at Brown University in Providence, Rhode Island, received two high-profile awards this year. In June, she was named a Pew Scholar in Biomedical Sciences by the Pew Charitable Trusts, based in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania; and in February, she received a fellowship from the Alfred P. Sloan Foundation in New York. She plans to use the grants to distinguish herself in a fast-moving field.

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Source: Nature

Biomedical Research
Oct 28, 2009

''Tricks, Not Treats -- Pew Study Finds 'Deceptive' Credit Card Practices Rising''

"Alison Howard, a single mom from Atlanta, sent her only son Bryan off to college last year for what she hoped would be a lifelong education. One lasting lesson is now burned into his brain: Beware of banks bearing special credit card offers."

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Source: ABC News

Apr 25, 2011

Tremendous Support for USDA School Meal Changes

When it comes to school meals, adults and kids alike are ready for a change. An extraordinary number of people sent messages to the U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA) in support of the agency’s proposed standards to improve school meals. More than 115,000 people took action on this Web site and others, sending the message that it’s time to serve healthier foods and beverages to all students! The huge number of supportive comments clearly demonstrates that Americans urgently want to improve school meals.

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Source: Kids' Safe and Healthful Foods Project

School Food
Sep 1, 2008

''Tracking 'fringe banking'''

"The alternative financial services (AFS) industry has attracted a lot of attention lately. Virtually nonexistent in this country 20 years ago, it has grown into a $100 billion business."

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Source: fedgazette, The Federal Reserve Bank of Minneapolis

Oct 29, 2012

Toxicology: The learning curve

Researchers say that some chemicals have unexpected and potent effects at very low doses — but regulators aren't convinced.

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Source: Nature

Food Additives
Jan 31, 2011

''Toxic Suspicions Could Fuel Regulatory Overhaul''

"Environmentalists want to ban BPA -- and also shift the burden of proof for all chemicals."

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Source: National Journal

Aug 5, 2008

''Toxic Plastic Toys Could Go the Way of the Dinosaurs''

"Children's advocates say they hope a sweeping consumer protection law passed by Congress last week will begin a broad national effort to shield youngsters from dangerous chemicals."

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Source: USA Today

May 17, 2009

''Toxic Plastic''

"Congress is on the verge of passing legislation that would transform the way credit card companies and consumers interact."

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Source: The Washington Post

Nov 10, 2010

''Top-name drug recalls a bitter pill for consumers''

"Industry officials and experts say the rise of well-known product names on major recalls is partly due to enhanced regulatory scrutiny."

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Source: Reuters

Drug Manufacturing and Distribution, Drug Safety
Mar 23, 2010

''Top psychiatrist calls for ethics cleanup around 'Big Pharma'''

"American psychiatrists need to break away from a "culture of influence" created by their financial dealings with the drug industry, the head of the National Institute of Mental Health said in a leading medical journal."

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Source: Associated Press

Conflicts of Interest
Nov 23, 2011

''To Capitol Hill: End the Food Fight''

“The legislative events of last week had to surprise parents and educators who struggle to provide children with sound nutritional choices in a world often inhospitable to healthy behavior.”


 

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Source: The Huffington Post

School Food
Aug 24, 2010

''To Bank Or Not To Bank''

"A new study from the Pew Health Group shows a growing number of low income and minority families are using alternative financial services instead of the traditional banking system."

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Source: National Public Radio

Jul 28, 2011

''Tight Times Boost Business Credit Cards''

''More small companies—already struggling with weak sales and tight lending—are being forced to rely on business credit cards to provide working capital.''

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Source: The Wall Street Journal

Oct 20, 2005

''Three young faculty members named MacArthur 'genius' fellows''

"Nicole King, a Pew Scholar in the Biomedical Sciences and molecular biologist from the University of California, Berkeley, was named one of 25 MacArthur Fellows, a prestigious award by the John D. and Catherine T. MacArthur Foundation to individuals whose work demonstrates exceptional originality and promise of future advances in their field."

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Source: UC Berkeley News

Biomedical Research
Apr 19, 2012

''Think carrots, not candy as school snack, group suggests''

"Junk food may soon be hard to buy at American public schools as the U.S. government readies new rules requiring healthier foods to be sold beyond the cafeteria - a move most parents support, according to a poll released on Thursday."

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Source: Reuters

School Food
Dec 26, 2012

''The One Issue Food Activists Should Focus On''

''Ask a dozen food activists what political change they want to see in 2013 and you’ll get a dozen different answers, maybe two dozen: Restrict sodium in packaged foods. Label genetically modified ingredients. End subsidies to big farms. All are critical. What did meet all the requirements was this: Get antibiotics off the farm and out of the food supply."

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Source: The Washington Post

Antibiotics in Food Animal Production
Aug 12, 2009

''The New Math of Financial Aid''

Despite the availability of federal money, many students rely on private loans from banks. According to TICAS's Project on Student Debt, the proportion of undergrads who took out such loans jumped from 5 percent in 2003–04 to 14 percent in 2007–08.

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Source: Newsweek

Mar 31, 2009

''The Moment for Credit Card Reform''

"We all know what an uphill battle reforming abusive credit card practices has been. As a twenty-five year veteran of that fight, I know it as well as anyone. But this morning, the Senate took a big step up that mountain."

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Source: Huffington Post

Feb 27, 2013

''The Loophole That Keeps Precarious Medical Devices in Use''

The U.S. Food and Drug Administration announced last month that it will classify metal-on-metal hip implants as high-risk devices. That comes after the artificial joints were found to have failed at high rates, causing disability and meaning additional surgery for thousands of people. But hundreds of other potentially high-risk medical devices remain in use without what many consider to be adequate testing

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Source: The Atlantic

Drugs and Devices at the FDA
Apr 9, 2013

The Junk Food Loophole in USDA's Regulations

Jessica Donze Black, director of the Pew's kids' safe and Healthful foods project speaks with the Los Angeles Times about a loophole in the USDA's new competitive foods rules that would allow junk food to be served in school cafeterias.

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Source: Los Angeles Times

School Food
Aug 18, 2011

''The Drug Supply Chain''

Allan Coukell, director of Medical Programs at Pew Health Group, appears on the Kojo Nnamdi Show as they explore the globalization of the drug industry and what it means for the quality and safety of our prescription drugs.

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Source: The Kojo Nnamdi Show

Drug Manufacturing and Distribution, Drug Safety
Jul 11, 2011

''The Doctor Is Out (In the Community)''

"Many of the most urgent health problems facing the nation—like diabetes, asthma, obesity and injuries—are shaped by conditions in the places where we live, work and play. The United States spends more money on health care per person than any other country—$2.5 trillion in 2009, yet our health statistics consistently lag behind other developed nations."

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Source: The Public Health Law Network

Health Impact Assessment
Aug 8, 2009

''The Business of Poverty''

On PBS' Bill Moyers Journal, Safe Banking Opportunities project director Matt Fellowes spoke about financial products and services utilized by lower-income consumers, the market opportunity in serving these households, and how it can be improved to benefit both these consumers as well as the businesses serving them.

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Source: Bill Moyers Journal on PBS