Monday, September 15, 2008

Cosmetics Dangerous Products for my Ladies Friends








1-Category: Cosmetics (the Right PIC-White & pink pic)
Product: Whitening cream - Lightening Beauty Crème
Brand: G&G
Type/number of model: Batch code: 33245 (embossed on tube). The product also has the markings P:07/12/04 NPG E:06/12/07
Description: Off-white cream in a 30g metal tube with pungent odour, inside a white and orange/peach coloured box.
Country of origin: Ivory Coast
The Dangerous Effect : Chemical
The product poses a chemical risk because it contains 3.8% of hydroquinone,



2-Category: Cosmetics(the Left PIC-Red Product)
Product: Hair colouring cream - "Color Contrast"
Brand: JALYD
Type/number of model: Concerning the presentation of "Color Contrast", it is sold in three colours: red, copper and copper red. The withdrawal from the market covers all batches and all presentations/colours of this product.
Description: The product "Colour Contrast", brand "Jalyd" is exclusively for professional use by hairdressers (hair colouring cream) but certain stores may sell this kind of product directly to the consumer. The product is used to obtain contrast with other colouring products of the same brand.
Country of origin: Italy
The Dangerous Effect :Chemical
The product poses a chemical risk because the list of ingredients includes the substance “m-phenylenediamine”,

3-Category: Cosmetics
Product: Nail polish
Brand: inm
Type/number of model:
- inm Out The Door Nail Lacquer A Good Year S239239 (EAN: 670387002395)
- inm Out The Door Heart of Glass S239207 (EAN: 670387002074)
- inm Out The Door Merlot S239208 (EAN: 670387002081)
Description: Nail polish in 15 ml glass bottles. Approximate size of bottle: 30 x 70 mm.
Country of origin: United States
the Dangerous Effect :Chemical
The product poses a chemical risk because it contains 3-5.95% by weight of Dibutyl phthalate (DBP),

Saturday, September 13, 2008

New Dangerous Stuff hve been Found in the Market








1-Category : Toys
Product : Musical soft toy dog
Brand : SL
Type/number of model: Ref. R0423, barcode: 8657911070121
Description : Soft toy dog with the following information on the label: ´Not recommended for children under 36 months, RO423, seated musical dog´.
Country of origin : China
The Dangerous Effec : Choking
The product poses a risk of choking because of small parts. The eyes of the dog, which are made of a rigid polymeric material, may be detached and these fit entirely into the small parts cylinder


2-Category : Electrical appliances
Product : Flat screen television set
Brand : Philips
Type/number of model: 19PFL5403D/1020PFL3403/10 and 20PFL3403D/1022PFL5403D/1026PFL3403/10 and 26PFL3403D/10,
with serial numbers : CG1A0813xxxxxx -CG1A0832xxxxxx, in which x can be any number.
Description : Flat screen television set. Packing material: cardboard box. The affected products were produced between March (week 13) and August (week 32) 2008.
Country of origin : Poland
The Dangerous Effec :Electric shock
The product poses a risk of electric shock because of contaminated components affecting the mechanical internal construction of the TV. Over time this damage could lead to loosening of high voltage parts thereby giving access to live parts, especially antenna input, leading to a potential electrical shock haza

3-Category: Toys
Product: Expanding toys - Alligator egg growing pet
Brand: Unknown
Type/number of model: Barcode: 9414760000247
Description: The alligator is inside an egg which hatches and grows when immersed into water according to the instructions for use. The dimensions of the egg are approx: 60 x 46 mm. Packaging: plastic capsule.
Country of origin: China
The Dangerous Effec :Choking
The product poses a risk of choking because small components (legs) entirely fit into the small parts cylinder and can be easily detached. These small parts can expand by more than 50% (measured value: 25.7 190.6%).

Saturday, July 19, 2008

Freezing / Microwaving Plastic Containers Releases Cancer-Causing Dioxin

information from a Johns Hopkins newsletter claims that freezing water in plastic bottles and microwaving foods in plastic wrap releases toxic dioxin and may cause cancer

Subject: Plastic and Cancer News from Johns Hopkins

No plastics in microwaves

No water bottles in freezer..

No plastic wrap in microwaves

see below..


Subject: Plastic and Cancer news from Johns Hopkins
Warning---
Cancer from Plastic..... some tennis players freeze H2O in plastic bottles !!

Johns Hopkins has recently sent this out in their newsletters worth noting...

This information is being circulated at Walter Reed Army Medical Center.

Dioxin Carcinogens causes cancer, especially breast cancer. Don't freeze your plastic water bottles with water as this also releases dioxin in the plastic.

Dr. Edward Fujimoto from Castle hospital was on a TV program explaining this health hazard. (He is the manager of the Wellness Program at the hospital.)

He was talking about dioxin and how bad they are for us. He said that we should not be heating our food in the microwave using plastic containers. This applies to foods that contain fat.

He said that the combination of fat, high heat and plastics releases dioxin into the food and ultimately into the cells of the body.

Dioxin are carcinogens and highly toxic to the cells of our bodies.

Instead, he recommends using glass, Corning Ware, or ceramic containers for heating food. You get the same results, without the dioxin. So such things as TV dinners, instant ramen and soups, etc., should be removed from the container and heated in something else.

Paper isn't bad but you don't know what is in the paper. It's just safer to use tempered glass, Corning Ware, etc.

He said we might remember when some of the fast food restaurants moved away from the foam containers to paper. The dioxin problem is one of the reasons.

To add to this, Saran wrap placed over foods as they are nuked, with the high heat, actually drips poisonous toxins into the food, use paper towels.

Pass this on to your family & friends & those that are important in you life.

Thursday, June 19, 2008

Don't buy DASANI water PLS.

Coca-Cola wins 'Bad Product Award

Things get worse with CokeBottled tap water withdrawn after cancer scare
First, Coca-Cola's new brand of "pure" bottled water,

Dasani, was revealed to be tap water taken from the mains. Then it emerged that what the firm described as its "highly sophisticated purification process", based on Nasa spacecraft technology, was in fact reverse osmosis used in many modest domestic water purification units.

The entire UK supply of Dasani was pulled off the shelves because it has been contaminated with bromate, a cancer-causing chemical.

It goes something like this: take Thames Water from the tap in your factory in Sidcup, Kent; put it through a purification process, call it "pure" and give it a mark-up from 0.03p to 95p per half litre; in the process, add a batch of calcium chloride, containing bromide, for "taste profile"; then pump ozone through it, oxidising the bromide - which is not a problem - into bromate - which is. Finally, dispatch to the shops bottles of water containing up to twice the legal limit for bromate (10 micrograms per litre).Bromide is a naturally occurring trace chemical that has a sedative effect. It is said to have been added by the British army to soldiers' tea during the WWII to dampen down their lust. But when it is oxidised into bromate it becomes "a pretty nasty carcinogen", according to David Drury, one of the principal inspectors for the DWI."I've checked Thames water's supply this morning and it is free of bromate," he said.The legal limits are set to have a wide margin of safety, and the Food Standards Agency advice yesterday was that while
Dasani contained illegal levels of bromate, it did not present an immediate risk to the public."Any increased cancer risk is likely to be small.
However the levels are higher than legally permitted in the UK and present an unnecessary risk.


Some consumers may chose not to drink any Dasani they purchased prior to its withdrawal given the levels of bromate in it," the FSA said.Coca-Cola said it was voluntarily withdrawing all Dasani "to ensure that only products of the highest quality are provided to our consumers"


Tap water is poured into a bottle of 'Dasani' water in London in 2004. Coca-Cola has won a 'Bad Product Award' for selling water that is taken from local and municipal supplies to consumers

Don't use-reuse plastic bottles until you read this

Dangers of Nalgene water bottles and other plastic sport water bottles

Many Nalgene water bottles and other hard plastic sport water bottles are made of polycarbonate (#7 on the bottom) , which may leach Bisphenol A, an estrogen-like chemical. Canada is considering a ban of products containing Bisphenol A (BPA) and a new American study links it to breast cancer and early puberty, and is particularly concerned about the effect on babies. Others have raised concerns about the effect of feminizing hormones on men, such as breast enlargement or dropping semen counts. At the same time, sport water bottles are ubiquitous and we don't want people going back to buying bottled water. What should you do? Time to nix the Nalgene? We looked at our past posts and the latest reports, and suggest the following.
7 Ways to beat BPA, in order of Importance:
1. Ditch the clear plastic baby bottles, right now. All the research that says there are problems point at the effect of the estrogen-like BPA on children as being the most significant. 2. Tin cans are often lined in plastic BPA and sit around a long time; get rid of older tin cans, particularly if they contain tomatoes and other acidic fruits. 3. Don't use your polycarbonate bottle for hot drinks. 4. Polycarbonate bottles get crazed and cracked as they get older; that increases surface area. Get rid of old ones.5. Replace your Polycarbonate bottle with a Sigg, Kleen Kanteen, or the new BPA free Camelbak, particularly if pregnant or pre-pubescent.6. Replace jugs where water sits around a long time, like Brita knockoffs. (Brita says they are BPA free) 7. Stop using jugged water cooler water, get a filter and cooler that uses city water. It is a big jug so there probably isn't much of a problem, but why are you drinking bottled water anyways?
Don't worry about polycarbonates in non-food related products like CDs and DVDs. but keep them out of babies' mouths.

Thursday, June 12, 2008

Continuing of Chinese Dangerous Products in The Market

1-Category : Electrical
Appliances
-Products : Electric fan
-Brand : GUT MODEL
-Type/number of model : GDV032
-Description : An electric fan
packed in a cardboard
box. The label carries
the following
information: "Box fan
gama Silent". CE
marking.
"Made in China".
-Country of origin : China
-Danger : Electric shock

The product poses a risk of electric shock because :
A- the gauges can touch the main insulation of the
internal parts,
B- the timer and speed selector controls are not
properly secured.
2--Products :Fryer – "Smart Clean Fryer"
-Brand : TEFAL
-Type/number of model : FR400915 and FR400916
-Description : Domestic electric deep-fat food fryer
-Country of origin : China
-Danger : Fire
- The product poses a risk of fire because of loose connections in the mains terminal block which causes arcing, leading to melting and burning of the surrounding plastic insulation which could drop onto the plastic moulding beneath and melt or burn a hole in the base of the appliance. A large hole in the base would provide access to live parts, which could present a risk to the user, bearing in mind that the product may be alight and smoking and somebody, in a panic, could try to lift the product to put the flames out without disconnecting it from the mains supply.












3-Category : Laser pointers

-Product: Laser pointer

- Brand: LASER POINTER SUPER POWERED



-Type/number of model: Unknown

-Description: Laser pointers –
a key chain with 12 interchangeable points,
marked as He-Ne laser,
wavelength 630-680 nm,
output 1 mW, class II. The points have
various motifs (eg. butterfly, hand, ant,
etc.) The laser pointer works in a continual
regime. Packed in a plastic container with
a transparent lid and in a cardboard box
with a transparent front part enabling
the product to be seen.







-Country of origin: China
-Danger : Damage to sight






The product poses a risk of damage to sight because the measured values of a direct beam exceed the limit value for eye exposure. In addition, the product has insufficient safety warnings and user instructions. In case of inappropriate use, especially by children, the beam could directly strike an unprotected eye and damage it.

Friday, June 6, 2008

Genetically Engineered Foods May Pose National Health Risk

In a study in the early 1990’s rats were fed genetically modified (GM) tomatoes. Well actually, the rats refused to eat them. They were force-fed. Several of the rats developed stomach lesions and seven out of forty died within two weeks. Scientists at the FDA who reviewed the study agreed that it did not provide a “demonstration of reasonable certainty of no harm.” In fact, agency scientists warned that GM foods in general might create unpredicted allergies, toxins, antibiotic resistant diseases, and nutritional problems. Internal FDA memos made public from a lawsuit reveal that the scientists urged their superiors to require long-term safety testing to catch these hard-to-detect side effects.
But FDA political appointees, including a former attorney for Monsanto in charge of policy, ignored the scientists’ warnings. The FDA does not require safety studies. Instead, if the makers of the GM foods claim that they are safe, the agency has no further questions. The above-mentioned GM tomato was approved in 1994.The safety studies conducted by the biotech industry are often dismissed by critics as superficial and designed to avoid finding problems. Tragically, scientists who voice their criticism, and those who have discovered incriminating evidence, have been threatened, stripped of responsibilities, denied funding or tenure, or fired. For example,
a UK government-funded study demonstrated that rats fed a GM potato developed potentially pre-cancerous cell growth, damaged immune systems, partial atrophy of the liver, and inhibited development of their brains, livers and testicles. When the lead scientist went public with his concerns, he was promptly fired from his job after 35 years, and silenced with threats of a lawsuit.Americans eat genetically modified foods everyday. Although the GM tomato has been taken off the market, millions of acres of soy, corn, canola, and cotton have had foreign genes inserted into their DNA. The new genes allow the crops to survive applications of herbicide, create their own pesticide, or both. While there are only a handful of published animal safety studies, mounting evidence, which needs to be followed up, suggests that these foods are not safe. Rats fed GM corn had problems with blood cell formation.
Those fed GM soy had problems with liver cell formation,
And the livers of rats fed GM canola were heavier.
Pigs fed GM corn on several Midwest farms developed false pregnancies or sterility.
Cows fed GM corn in Germany died mysteriously.
And twice the number of chickens died when fed GM corn compared to those fed natural corn. Soon after GM soy was introduced to the UK, soy allergies skyrocketed by 50 percent. Without follow-up tests, we can’t be sure if genetic engineering was the cause, but there are plenty of ways in which genetic manipulation can boost allergies.
A gene from a Brazil nut inserted into soybeans made the soy allergenic to those who normally react to Brazil nuts.
GM soy currently consumed in the US contains a gene from bacteria. The inserted gene creates a protein that was never before part of the human food supply, and might be allergenic.
Sections of that protein are identical to those found in shrimp and dust mite allergens. According to criteria recommended by the World Health Organization (WHO), this fact should have disqualified GM soy from approval.
The sequence of the gene that was inserted into soy has inexplicably rearranged itself over time. The protein it creates is likely to be different than the one intended, and was never subject to any safety studies.
It may be allergenic or toxic.
The process of inserting the foreign gene damaged a section of the soy’s own DNA, scrambling its genetic code. This mutation might interfere with DNA expression or create a new, potentially dangerous protein.
The most common allergen in soy is called trypsin inhibitor. GM soy contains significantly more of this compared with natural soy.
The only human feeding study ever conducted showed that the gene inserted into soybeans spontaneously transferred out of food and into the DNA of gut bacteria. This has several serious implications. First, it means that the bacteria inside our intestines, newly equipped with this foreign gene, may create the novel protein inside of us. If it is allergenic or toxic, it may affect us for the long term, even if we give up eating GM soy. The same study verified that the promoter, which scientists attach to the inserted gene to permanently switch it on, also transferred to gut bacteria. Research on this promoter suggests that it might unintentionally switch on other genes in the DNA—permanently. This could create an overproduction of allergens, toxins, carcinogens, or antinutrients. Scientists also theorize that the promoter might switch on dormant viruses embedded in the DNA or generate mutations.This is only a partial list of what may go wrong with a single GM food crop. The list for others may be longer. Take for example, the corn inserted with a gene that creates its own pesticide. We eat that pesticide, and plenty of evidence suggests that it is not as benign as the biotech proponents would have us believe. Preliminary evidence, for example, shows that thirty-nine Philippinos living next to a pesticide-producing cornfield developed skin, intestinal, and respiratory reactions while the corn was pollinating. Tests of their blood also showed an immune response to the pesticide. Consider what might happen if the gene that produces the pesticide were to transfer from the corn we eat into our gut bacteria. It could theoretically transform our intestinal flora into living pesticide factories.No one monitors human health impacts of GM foods. If the foods were creating health problems in the US population, it might take years or decades before we identified the cause. One epidemic in the1980’s provides a chilling example. A new disease was caused by a brand of the food supplement L-tryptophan, which had been created through genetic modification and contained tiny traces of contaminants. The disease killed about 100 Americans and caused sickness or disability in about 5-10,000 others. The only reason that doctors were able to identify that an epidemic was occurring, was because the disease had three simultaneous characteristics: it was rare, acute, and fast acting. Even then it was nearly missed entirely.Studies show that the more people learn about GM foods, the less they trust them. In Europe, Japan, and other regions, the press has been far more open about the potential dangers of genetic manipulation. Consequently, consumers there demand that their food supply be GM-free and manufacturers comply. But in the US, most people believe they have never eaten a GM food in their lives (even though they consume them daily).
Lacking awareness, complacent consumers have been the key asset for the biotech industry in the US. As a result, millions of Americans are exposed to the potential dangers, and children are most at risk.
Perhaps the revelations in the reports released on opposite sides of the planet will awaken consumers as well as regulators, and GM foods on the market will be withdrawn.To become more informed of the dangers of GM foods, to download a letter to food manufacturers, and to learn how to avoid buying and eating GM foods, see www.seedsofdeception.com. To sign up for the Seeds of Deception newsletter, see http://www.seedsofdeception.com/newsletter.php#optin
This is the first in a regular column about genetically modified foods by Jeffrey M. Smith. He is the author of Seeds of Deception: Exposing Industry and Government Lies about the Safety of the Genetically Engineered Foods You’re Eating, and the Director of the Institute for Responsible Technology.

Tuesday, May 27, 2008

PEPSI ,If u want to drink it PLS. make it Cans



Great boy picking the colors to prepare the PEPSI













Men at work - washing the bottles








Men at work washing the bottles Fully







Boys placing the bottles in the tray








Boy filling the PEPSI Soooooo... cold










Boy filling the PEPSI & checking for the air bubles












Boy filling the Gas in the bottles











Boy searching for the right caps









Great man at capping the bottle









Quality checking and Success******

Tuesday, May 20, 2008

WATCH OUT You May bE hAvE A FOOD ALLERGIES

Information for allergy sufferers
Some foods, food ingredients or components of an ingredient can cause severe allergic reactions in some people - this is known as
anaphylaxis. Foods such as peanuts, tree nuts (e.g. cashews, almonds, walnuts), shellfish, finned fish, milk, eggs, sesame and soybeans and their products, when present in food, may cause severe allergic reactions and must be declared on the label however small the amount. Gluten is also included in this list but the caution is more for those with Coeliac Disease rather than allergy. Those who are wheat allergic must stay away from all wheat including gluten.In addition, foods containing sulphite preservatives must be labelled as containing sulphites if they have 10 milligrams per kilogram or more of added sulphites. This is the level that may trigger asthma attacks in some asthmatics.A food must have a warning statement where people may be unaware of a severe health risk posed by an allergen in a food. The only current warning statement is in relation to food containing the bee product: royal jelly which has been reported to cause severe allergic reactions and in rare cases, fatalities, especially in asthma and allergy sufferers.
‘May contain’
You’ll notice some labels say ‘may contain’ certain allergens, for example ‘may contain nuts’. This is put on by the manufacturer who may be concerned that, while nuts aren’t added to the food, traces may be present due, for example, the product having been made on the same equipment as products containing nuts. Allergy consumer support groups are working with the food industry to make these labels more helpful to allergy sufferers.
Other names for major allergens
Sometimes ingredients derived from peanuts, tree nuts, shellfish, finned fish, milk, gluten, eggs and soybeans are not clearly identified in the ingredients list, for example soy might be listed as ‘ textured vegetable protein’. Allergy consumer groups are working with the food industry on industry guidelines to assist them in providing more meaningful information in plain English.
Look out for the following:
Milk products
People allergic to milk products should avoid cow or goat milk, cheese, butter, ghee, butter milk, cream, creme fraiche, milk powder, whey, casein, caseinate and any margarine which contains milk products. Always be aware of foods such as bakery items that have a shine to them. Egg and milk can be used to give food this glazed appearance. Casein, a milk product, may be used as a binder in meat products and “restructured” salmon or imitation seafood.
Fish and shellfish
The major groups of fish and shellfish which can trigger allergic reactions are: S caly or finned fish (eg. salmon, cod, mackerel, sardines, herring, anchovies, tuna, trout, haddock, John Dory); Crustaceans (eg. prawns/shrimps, lobster, crab, crayfish, yabbies, marron): Molluscs (eg. snail, abalone, clams, oysters, mussel; Cephalopods (eg. octopus, cuttlefish, squid, calamari) and Gastropods (eg. sea slugs, snails). People who are allergic to one type of finned fish are often allergic to other types as well. Similarly, allergy to one type of crustacean usually means that all crustaceans and their products are best avoided. On the other hand, people who are allergic to seafood from one group of seafood (e.g. finned fish) can usually tolerate those from another group (e.g. shellfish). Occasionally, intense cooking will partially or completely destroy the triggering allergen. This may explain why some people who are allergic to fresh fish are able to tolerate tinned salmon or tuna. Those with fish or shellfish allergy are advised to speak with their doctor regarding safe food choices and consumption of any seafood.
Complete avoidance of one or more groups of seafood is often advised, yet this can be difficult. Accidental exposure is more likely to occur when eating away from home, particularly when eating at restaurants which also serve seafood. A fish or shellfish allergic individual would be encouraged to stay away from seafood restaurant for obvious reasons. Other potential sources of accidental exposure include:
Seafood platters
Smorgasbords/buffet
Asian foods, in which crustaceans, usually prawns can be a hidden ingredient eg. prawns in fried rice or soups.
Fish sauce which is used in a wide range of foods, including stir-fry meals and salads.
Food may be rolled in the same batter or cooked in the same oil as seafood eg. takeaway fish and chips.
Anchovies (fish) in Caesar salads and as an ingredient in Worcestershire sauce or pizza topping.
Barbequed foods where seafood and other foods are cooked together or without cleaning the shared surface and utensils.
Soy
Soy finds its way into many processed foods, including baked goods such as bread, batters, cereals, sausages; as a binder in small goods; and in salads and canned beans. Other names for soy include soy, soy flour, soya protein, vegetable gum, textured vegetable protein, hydrolysed vegetable protein, lecithin, bean curd, soya bean paste (Miso, Tempe), and tofu. Soy lecithin is an emulsifier (additive number 322) found in many foods such as chocolate, margarine, and carob. Most commercial lecithin is obtained from soybeans . Other sources of lecithin are egg yolks and leguminous seeds, including peanuts and maize.
Eggs
Most people allergic to hen eggs are also allergic to similar proteins in other bird eggs like duck or quail, so these are best avoided as well. Cooked egg is sometimes better tolerated than raw egg, so some children with a mild egg allergy seem to be able to tolerate small amounts in cakes or slices. Individuals who are egg allergic should always follow the advice of their doctor regarding consumption of these foods.
Common foods containing egg include: malted drinks, custards, mousse, soufflés, meringues, glazed rolls or pastries, cakes, slices and macaroons, some soups and sauces (e.g. Hollandaise), rissoles or meat loaf, where eggs may be used as a binding agent and dessert mixes such as waffles, pavlova mix, confectionery etc. Use of terms such as egg yolk and egg white, albumen, egg powder or solids on the label indicate the presence of egg in a food.
Peanuts and tree nuts
Some foods can cause problems for the peanut/nut allergic individuals when eating out and should be avoided unless they can positively confirm there is no peanut/tree nut protein present. These include Asian style dishes including soup, baked goods such as pastries, cakes and biscuits, sauces, fillings, desserts, toppings and gravy. Peanut sauce has also been used as a hidden ingredient for marinating chicken. Sometimes peanuts will be stored near other nuts in the production line or processed with other nuts and contamination may occur as a result of this practice. If you have a peanut allergy it’s safer to avoid all nut products. Tree nut allergic individuals should avoid peanuts for the same reasons.

Sunday, May 18, 2008

DON'T USE "black henna" temporary tattoo ink and paste containing PPD

OTTAWA - Health Canada is advising Canadians that the use of the ingredient para-phenylenediamine (PPD) in "black henna" temporary tattoo ink and paste is unsafe. Allergic reactions to PPD include red skin rashes, contact dermatitis, itching, blisters, open sores, scarring and other potentially harmful effects. Allergic reactions to PPD may also lead to sensitivity to other products such as hair dye, sun block and some types of black clothing.
PPD is an acceptable ingredient in hair dyes that, when used correctly, do not come into contact with skin for prolonged periods of time. The use of PPD in cosmetics applied to the skin for prolonged periods of time poses a risk to the health and safety of the user. As such, "black henna" temporary tattoo ink and paste containing PPD is not considered safe.
Under Section 16 of the Food and Drugs Act, no person shall sell cosmetics that contain substances that may cause injury to the health of the user when the cosmetic is used according to the directions on the label or accompanying the cosmetic. Cosmetics containing PPD that are applied directly to the skin are not to be sold in Canada. This includes "black henna" temporary tattoos containing PPD, which are often sold and applied by artisans at markets, fairs and amusement parks.
Before receiving a temporary tattoo, ask the vendor to confirm that PPD is not being used in the ink or paste. Health Canada permits the use of natural henna and other safe dyes in cosmetics.
Here are some things to look for if you suspect that PPD is being used in "black henna" tattoo ink or paste:
PPD in "black henna" is used for its long-lasting properties and intense black colour. If the formula and resulting tattoo are jet black, the ink or paste may contain PPD;
If the tattoo is to be removed within an hour, the ink or paste may contain PPD;
PPD stains typically last one to three weeks, without fading; and,
PPD-black henna mixes usually have very little or no scent.

Sure you want to eat that burger?

Just 0.05 percent of U.S. beef is tested for deadly bacteria

It's a Friday night in Missoula, Montana, when my buddy Eric and I walk into the Oxford Café. We make our way through the usual crowd of gamblers, pool players, drinkers, and drunks, and take a seat against the far wall. The waitress looks weary, and we look like work to her. "What'll you have?" she asks. Eric orders a hamburger. I point at the laminated menu and order scrambled eggs and brains, nicknamed "He Needs 'Em."
"Impossible," the waitress says flatly. "Since mad cow disease, the USDA won't let us serve that."
"I don't know why you'd want to eat brains," Eric says. This from a guy who thinks nothing of gutting an elk.
I've eaten calf testicles and cow hearts and all sorts of things, but I'd never eaten brains before. I'd heard about the Oxford's fabled dish and figured this would be my chance to try something new, to taste something considered a delicacy in many parts of the world. It didn't seem particularly risky. In fact, no one in Missoula (or anywhere else in the United States) had ever been sickened from eating mad-cow-contaminated meat.
"They'll let us sell pig brains," the waitress offers, "but who wants to eat those?"
I follow Eric's lead and order the state-sanctioned part of the cow, though if we're talking food safety, I really should pass. Turns out, the humble hamburger may be the most dangerous item on the menu.
You know there's trouble when your average American carnivore thinks twice about biting into a burger. The appetite-killer in question: Escherichia coliform, a.k.a. E. coli, the bacteria behind the spate of recalls that recently hit the nation's beef supply. From June to September 2007 alone, ground beef contaminated with E. coli sickened 55 people while also shuttering one business and shaking up the USDA.
Not all E. coli are evil. There are actually hundreds of different strains, some of which are residing in your body right now, helping you absorb food and process waste. In fact, it's estimated that the average person excretes 10 billion Escherichia coli bacteria with every bowel movement.
One strain that definitely does not belong inside you is E. coli O157:H7. These bacteria normally live in the guts of cattle. However, if the slaughtering process is sloppy, feces or stomach contents can come into contact with meat and contaminate it with the bug. Next thing you know, you're weathering a weeklong bout of stomach cramps and bloody diarrhea. That is, unless your immune system isn't at full strength, in which case you're facing kidney failure or death.
Prior to 1982, little was known about E. coli O157:H7. That year, the strain was identified as a pathogen after a number of people were sickened by tainted hamburgers. A decade later the bug popped up again, this time in burgers from the fast-food chain Jack in the Box. Hundreds were hospitalized and four children died.
Still, it wasn't until 1994 that the USDA began testing for E. coli in samples of beef in packing plants. Five years after that, the agency added an extra safeguard by implementing a system known as Hazard Analysis and Critical Control Points (HACCP), which placed the main responsibility for testing in the hands of the major slaughterhouses. Theoretically, if they detect a bad batch of beef, it won't be shipped to the smaller "down-line" processors, whose job it is to grind and package bulk beef for the public.
For a while, the system appeared to be working. On April 14, 2005, the USDA, FDA, and CDC released a joint report stating that incidence of E. coli infections decreased 42 percent from 1996 to 2004. In the press release, then–USDA Secretary Mike Johanns proudly noted, "The continued reduction in illnesses from E. coli O157 is a tremendous success story and we are committed to continuing this positive trend in the future."

Saturday, May 10, 2008

Virus Kills 22 Children in Eastern China



By ANDREW JACOBS
Published: May 3, 2008
BEIJING — A fast-spreading viral outbreak in China has killed 22 children, sickened nearly 3,600 others and caused panic among parents in an impoverished corner of Anhui Province, government health officials said Friday.


All of the fatalities, from lung problems and other complications, have been in children younger than 6, with a majority of them under 2.
The outbreak, caused by a particularly strong intestinal virus, enterovirus 71, or EV-71, has been spreading in the city of Fuyang, in east-central China, since early March. Provincial health officials, however, announced the outbreak only this week, raising questions about whether they had been trying to conceal it.
In recent days the Chinese media have heavily criticized the local government response, offering comparisons to the SARS epidemic of 2003, which drew widespread attention to China’s shaky public health system and official attempts to cover up the outbreak. Xinhua, the official news agency, published the latest figures on Friday.
On Thursday, the World Health Organization warned that the disease, which thrives in warm weather and passes easily among children, could spread in the coming summer months. It advised child care centers and schools in the city and surrounding region to stay closed until the spread was curtailed.
The virus begins with a fever and often leads to mouth ulcers and to blisters on the hands, feet and buttocks. Commonly known as hand, foot and mouth disease, it has no relation to the foot-and-mouth disease that infects livestock.
There is no vaccine or cure, but most patients recover in a week without treatment. In severe cases, brain swelling can lead to paralysis or death. Cleaning surfaces with bleach and washing hands significantly reduces the spread of the pathogen.
Health officials in Fuyang said more than 970 children remained hospitalized, 48 of them in critical condition. Health officials said the disease also spread to three adjacent provinces, with the bulk of them — 340 cases — in Hubei.
Although the number of infected children has been steadily climbing, the fatality rate has dropped substantially in recent weeks, falling to 0.2 percent from 11 percent in March, World Health Organization officials say.
Anxious parents have been overwhelming local hospitals in Fuyang. In a telephone interview, a doctor at No. 2 People’s Hospital said 200 sick children were being treated there. He said Friday that there had not been any fatalities in the past five days at the hospital. “I think the disease itself can be controlled, but it is hard to treat if there are complications,” said the doctor, who would give only his surname, Li.
Among parents, though, there is still widespread concern and confusion. Reached by phone, the father of a 1-year-old boy from a town outside Fuyang said misinformation was rife. The current rumor, he said, suggested that a local river was the source of the infection. The man, a truck driver named Wang, said that schools had been closed and that local health officials were instructing parents to frequently wash their children’s hands. “We really hope journalists can come and report more on this,” he said.
Since early April, teachers at the Dongfanghong kindergarten in Fuyang have been assiduously keeping the children clean and spraying the classrooms with a disinfectant daily. Still, by Tuesday, when the authorities closed the school, nearly 100 of the school’s 500 students were being kept home by their parents. “A lot of parents are concerned about the contagiousness,” said Xu Yanyan, the headmistress.
Four years ago Fuyang was the epicenter of a powdered milk scandal. Fake formula lacking nutritional value sickened 200 infants, and 13 of them starved to death.
The Chinese media have not been shy about criticizing local officials who suppress information about infectious diseases and other kinds of bad news. In mid-April, several media outlets noted, authorities in Fuyang who were confronted by reporters denied that there was a problem. Two weeks later, after more than a dozen children had died, they were forced to acknowledge the outbreak.
In an editorial headlined “Tragic Costs of Delay,” China Daily, the official English-language newspaper, cited the SARS epidemic and the powdered milk scandal and chastised government for its sluggish response to the most recent health crisis. “The memory of the last tragedy only adds to the bitterness of the new one,” it said.
During the SARS outbreak, Chinese officials withheld information from the World Health Organization, restricted media reporting and undercounted the cases of those stricken. After the disease spread beyond China’s borders and provoked worldwide panic, the government pledged to confront future health emergencies with greater openness.
Huang Yuanxi contributed research.

Tuesday, May 6, 2008

Electric shock from Electrical appliances

Category : Electrical appliances

Product : Travel iron
Brand : ORBIT
Type/number of model: Model: TRAVEL MATE 800 W
Description : Travel steam iron with folding handle. The packaging is a cardboard box marked ORBIT TRAVEL MATE 800 W.
Country of origin : China
DaNGER : Electric shock
The product poses a risk of electric shock because the normal operating temperature differs from the rated power by more than + 5% or 20 W. At the rated power of 240 V a difference of + 18.3% was measured.In addition, the instructions for use do not contain safety information.


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Category: Lighting equipment
Product: Table lamp
Brand: GUOGUANG LIGHTING
Type/number of model: model: 90133,
EAN code: 920077005770
Description: The table lamp has a metallic base with a yellow decoration and a white-yellow lamp-shade. It is equipped with a with a touch switch marked: AC input 110 V, 60 Hz/ 220V, 50 Hz,
Yue Jia Lighting Hardware Electronic Accessory Factory.
Packaging: a yellow-blue cardboard box with a picture of the product and marking: 50 Hz, AC 220V, 2x max. 40W, size: 13x13x23.5 cm.
Country of origin : China
DANGER : Electric shock
The product poses a risk of electric shock
because:
1- the cable entries have sharp edges,
2 - the product does not comply with
the requirements on double and strengthened insulation.

Monday, April 28, 2008

Some Dangerous Toys (Don't Buy it for ur Kids)











The products poses a risk of :
1-Choking :
There is therefore a potential choking hazard if a child puts the squeaking mechanism into its mouth
2-Injuries because of :
A- sharp edges & points
B-welds in the metal frame, slots in the plastics
C-inappropriate dimension of it's parts
D-lack of warning about maximum age of users &
the right way of using it
-Electric shock :
The product poses a risk of electric shock because the transformer has inadequate strength. In addition, the transformer does not bear the required markings and symbols. The instruction manual does not refer to the use of the transformer. This can lead to inadvertent misuse creating a hazardous situation.
4-Microbiological :
These products pose a microbiological risk because
the liquid inside the toys contains significant amounts
of different microbes
(e.g. TPC, coliforms, burkholderia cepacia).