As LawyersandSettlements revealed today there is a new and disturbing source of bisphenol-A (BPA).
Move over, plastic water bottles. Enter the cash register and credit card receipt. Something we handle every day, keep in our wallets, pile on top of our desks….
According to John C. Warner, of the Warner Babcock Institute of Green Chemistry in Wilmington, Massachusetts BPA contained in electronic cash register and credit card receipts has been a problem for some time.
It was about ten years ago when BPA first appeared on the radar screen, a time when Babcock was teaching green chemistry at the University of Massachusetts. His former career with Polaroid taught him a thing or two about thermal imagining papers, a subject he talked about in an interview with ScienceNews published on October 7th.
Manufacturers would coat a powdery layer of BPA onto one side of a piece of paper together with an invisible ink, he said. “Later, when you applied pressure or heat, they would merge together and you’d get color.”
At the time, in the ’90s he thought little about the technology, he told ScienceNews, other than the fact he thought it was clever. However, when the health concerns about BPA began to emerge, he looked into it further—and he was in a perfect position to do so. As a professor of green chemistry at the University of Massachusetts, he had a ready gang Read the rest of this entry »
Individuals who suffer a shoulder injury, only to suffer through the pain and inconvenience of shoulder surgery should not have to bear even more suffering once the surgical repair is made. But they do.
For the uninformed, the shoulder pain pump—like all pain pumps—is a device that makes fast work of delivering pain medication quickly and efficiently to relieve the suffering encountered by a shoulder surgery patient. And make no mistake—shoulder surgery is painful. Little wonder that doctors were looking for ways to deliver pain medication more efficiently than what oral pain meds are capable of. Doctors were also looking for a level of control that giving a patient a bottle filled with potent pain pills did not provide.
The pain pump proved to be the answer: a device that delivered pain medication directly to the wound site through the insertion of a catheter, in a carefully controlled fashion.
Shoulder pain pumps were approved by the US Food and Drug Administration (FDA) for use in soft tissue surrounding the shoulder. However they are NOT approved for delivering pain medication directly into the shoulder joint. The FDA, in fact rejected that indication when the pain pump manufacturers put it forward.
They didn’t tell the doctors that. Doctors were, in fact led to believe that using pain pumps Read the rest of this entry »
Tyrell Blocker is a young fella with a family and doing the best he can. At 20 he has a newborn and all the responsibilities to go with it.
What he doesn’t have is a bank account. He only has one piece of ID. The bank requires two, so what’s a young father to do? Head to the check-cashing place and hope to escape with the majority of your pay in your pants once you pay the fee. Or just maybe there is another way…
Oh! But there is, says the prepaid debit card industry to the 80 million Americans who are classed as unbanked or underbanked. Just bring your paycheck to the Green Dot kiosk, or MiCash, or NetSpend, or AccountNow. Wal-Mart has one.
Our boy Tyrell hooked up with Pay-O-Matic in Manhattan. Took his paycheck and bought a Pay-O-Matic card. Note that it’s HIS money on the card. The card is worthless until it’s pre-loaded with the client’s cash. Aside from operating the storefront, printing the cards and owing anywhere from a nickel to 20 cents to the owner of the logo that emblazes the card, card providers haven’t a whole lot to lose beyond any loss associated with a bounced paycheck or overdraft.
But still, is that risk enough of a reason to charge more than two-dozen fees? That’s how many there are tagged to the Pay-O-Matic card. Poor Blocker didn’t know what hit him. As soon as he noticed the balance dropping like a rock every time he used his Pay-O-Matic card, even if he didn’t actually buy anything, he high-tailed it back to the kiosk to ask what the *@$% was going on. It was only then Read the rest of this entry »
Important as it is for citizens to have legal recourse to sue in order to right a wrong, do you sometimes wonder if things are getting a bit out of hand?
Case in point: in 2002 a detective with the New York Police Department (NYPD) accidentally shot himself in the knees while sitting on a chair and trying to holster his revolver. The following year he retired on a three-quarters disability pension and is now employed as a court officer in South Carolina making $24,000 annually.
He also sued the City of New York and last November was awarded $4.5 million in damages by a jury.
For accidentally shooting himself in the knee. For that kind money maybe we should all do that.
Obviously, the former NYPD man found himself a talented lawyer who presumably argued that the revolver, issued by the department, was faulty. As the NYPD is an agent of the City, the Big Apple would be on the hook.
Keep in mind that if we are injured, or victimized in concert with a situation or event through no fault of our own, we should have the right to seek compensation.
Case in point: the scores of women who have unknowingly put themselves in harm’s way by simply subscribing to Yaz birth control. They believed Yaz (and Yasmin) to be a safe and effective oral contraceptive, only to find out the hard way about risks for life-threatening blood clots and thrombosis. Women—painfully young, healthy women—have died.
And then there are the thousands of California workers who are robbed of their right to claim, Read the rest of this entry »
Be warned. This story has teeth.
What would be your reaction when you see a much larger and stronger dog (and a breed that carries the perception of being vicious) attacking a smaller, meeker dog?
A: Scream.
B: Call the SPCA, or the Police
C: Attempt to pull them apart and stop the attack
D: Nothing
For a man from Saskatoon, a city located in Western Canada, there needed to be one more letter to that stack noted above.
E: Bite Dog.
As in, give him a piece of his own medicine.
Doggonit, if it didn’t work too.
Here’s the story, according to the Canadian Broadcasting Corporation. Early in September Read the rest of this entry »