-
U.K. enlists Glaxo, Baxter in bird flu vaccine effort
U.K. awards the two companies a four-year, £155 million contracts; Glaxo, Europe’s biggest drugmaker, already has similar agreements with Switzerland, Iceland, and Denmark
-
-
Flora, Mississippi, wants to be home to new national lab
Many were surprised to see Flora, Mississippi (population 1,546) among the five finalists for the new National Bio and Agro-Defense Facility; many in the city were surprised as well, but they are planning to fight for the lab
-
-
Anxiety eases over U.K. foot-and-mouth outbreak
A zoo in Surrey and a farm in Kent have been given a provisional all-clear over foot-and-mouth disease after initial tests came back negative
-
-
Sanofi Pasteur to open new flu vaccine plant
French company to open new plant capable of producing 100 million doses of vaccine for annual flu seasons; U.S. readiness for avian flu pandemic bolstered
-
-
FDA warns of potential botulism risk from canned beans
Wisconsin producers voluntarily recall thousands of cases of French cut green beans after errors in processing leave consumers vulnerable to botulism
-
-
Global food trade a target for terrorists
Food technologists offer gloomy assessment of the vulnerability of the global food trade, and the ease with which terrorist can use it as a weapon
-
-
Aggies vice president for research resigns after CDC investigation
Researchers at Texas A&M were infected with CDC-listed bioterrorism agents during research on bioterror defenses, but the university was slow to report mishaps; the cost is high: the university’s license to do research on select agents was pulled, and it was eliminated from list of potential hosts of national bio-defense facility
-
-
FDA suspends plan to close, consolidate inspection laboratories
The FDA proposed to close 7 of its 13 labs around the country that test food and drugs for safety; daily revelations of unsafe and dangerous Chinese imports combined with public and congressional outcry lead agency to suspend proposal
-
-
FDA faces structural, statutory limits in food inspection
The agency’s form, function, and authority make it inherently incapable of inspecting and guaranteeing safety of U.S. food supply; system in need of a sweeping, profound revamping
-
-
-
Posion attack scare at Washington, D.C., Maryland Metrorail stations
“Pest abatement” contractor chooses to do his work Sunday afternoon rather than at midnight, leading to dozens of dead birds on Metro stations’ platforms; stations closed, FBI’s antiterror units dispatched
-
-
DoD awards $2.2 million to CombiMatrix for bioterrorism solution
The miliitary wants better antiterrorism and infectious disease products, and CombiMatrix gets the call
-
-
The true cost of food
The true cost of food must include the cost of protecting the food supply from further outbreaks of nastiness, and paying for the clean-up operations when they do occur
-
-
Critics charge new trade deals neglect food safety
Globalization critics charge that the Bush administration may be jeopardizing consumers as it presses Congress to approve free-trade agreements with countries with dubious food-safety records
-
-
Five states make the finalist list for national biolab
And the winner is: DHS is searching for a site for its $450 million national bio lab to replace the aging Plum Island, New York facility; five states make the finalist list
-