If this is your first visit, be sure to check out the FAQ by clicking the link above. You may have to register before you can post: click the register link above to proceed. To start viewing messages, select the forum that you want to visit from the selection below. |
|
|
Thread Tools | Display Modes |
#1
|
|||
|
|||
Pesticide tests may use pregnant women, kids
"Pesticide tests may use pregnant women, kids", Seattle
Post-Intelligencer, January 24, 2006, Link: http://seattlepi.nwsource.com/health/256785_epa24.html The Bush administration would allow some limited pesticide testing on children and pregnant women under controversial rules set to be made final as early as this week. After fielding about 50,000 public comments on its earlier human-testing proposals, the Environmental Protection Agency is setting out final rules that officials call tough and fair. But Democrats and environmentalists are raising an outcry, and courts could remain busy sorting it all out. "The fact that EPA allows pesticide testing of any kind on the most vulnerable, including abused and neglected children, is simply astonishing," Sen. Barbara Boxer, D-Calif., declared Monday. The new rules would prohibit regulators from using so-called "intentional exposure" research that involved children or pregnant women. But under what regulators described as "narrowly defined circumstances," such research could still be used -- if the researcher hadn't originally intended to submit the results to the EPA. The new rules require researchers to document their compliance with ethical guidelines, but exempt certain overseas tests. Testing on adults could proceed, following review by a new Human Studies Review Board that could "comment on" but not stop a proposed experiment. "EPA does not want to ignore potentially important information," the agency states in its final rule. "At the same time, the agency's conduct should encourage high ethical standards in research with human subjects." Boxer and several colleagues were one step ahead of the EPA Monday, which hadn't yet formally released the final rules protecting human subjects. But a leaked draft of the new rules, spanning about 100 pages, spells out both the new regulations and how they will be presented to the public. EPA officials could not be reached for comment Monday. "Humans process some substances differently from animals," the EPA notes in its final rule, scheduled for publication in the daily Federal Register. "Studies of this kind can provide essential support for safety monitoring programs. Animal data alone can sometimes provide an incomplete or misleading picture of a substance's safety or risk." The 50,000 comments received by the EPA since last September showcase the level of public interest, although regulators noted that 99 percent of the comments were part of an e-mail or organized letter-writing campaign. In June, the Senate imposed a moratorium on the EPA's use of human pesticide testing; the House had adopted a similar moratorium. The moratorium is in place until the final rule takes effect, which will be 60 days after publication. |
Thread Tools | |
Display Modes | |
|
|
Similar Threads | ||||
Thread | Thread Starter | Forum | Replies | Last Post |
Study finds more pregnant women need to get moving | Roman Bystrianyk | Pregnancy | 0 | November 22nd 05 03:05 AM |
misc.kids FAQ on Good things about having kids | [email protected] | Info and FAQ's | 0 | August 30th 05 05:25 AM |
misc.kids FAQ on Good things about having kids | [email protected] | Info and FAQ's | 0 | July 31st 05 05:24 AM |
misc.kids FAQ on Good things about having kids | [email protected] | Info and FAQ's | 0 | September 29th 04 05:18 AM |
misc.kids FAQ on Good things about having kids | [email protected] | Info and FAQ's | 0 | April 17th 04 12:26 PM |