News
FDA’s Food Safety Testing Suspended Due to Budget Cuts
Food safety programs supported by the FDA have been temporarily halted because of workforce reductions creating dangers to public health and illness prevention initiatives.

United States: The Food and Drug Administration halted fundamental food testing programs and quality control procedures owing to substantial staffing reductions at the Department of Health and Human Services (HHS). Documented internal cuts disrupted Food Emergency Response Network’s proficiency testing system that ensures precise food pathogen and contaminant detection, as reported by Reuters.
Impact on Public Health and Research
A staff reduction implemented at HHS impacted about 20,000 workers resulting in critical health initiatives being disrupted from drug approvals to bird flu protection programs. President Trump proposed budget cuts amounting to $40 billion which immediately produced adverse health security outcomes for the nation.
A Third World s**thole. Precisely what you voted for, #Murica: FDA plans to end most routine food safety inspections. {CBS News 17 April, link below the fold; photo: Andrew Kelly/Reuters} pic.twitter.com/4qogwhdMy7
— Hölle auf Erden – The Echo of a Distant Time 🇬🇧 (@Sunking278) April 18, 2025
FDA Lab Programs Lose Vital Support
The Food Emergency Response Network’s proficiency testing program, essential for ensuring the readiness and competency of the nation’s food safety labs, has been particularly impacted. Affected positions include key quality assurance officers, analytical chemists, and microbiologists at the FDA’s Human Food Program Moffett Center, critical to the laboratory’s operational success.
Bird Flu Testing and Accreditation Efforts Halted
As part of the broader disruption, the FDA has had to halt its bird flu testing initiatives for milk, cheese, and pet food products. Additionally, these suspensions are hindering food safety labs from meeting accreditation standards, with no immediate solutions in sight for alternative testing options, as reported by Reuters.
News
Every U.S. Rice Sample Tested Shows Arsenic, Cadmium, or Lead

Be smart about the rice you consume and how you prepare it to reduce your loved ones’ intake of potentially dangerous heavy metals.
United States: A new study by Healthy Babies, Bright Futures has uncovered that many rice brands sold in U.S. supermarkets—especially in cities like New York and Miami—contain measurable and potentially dangerous levels of heavy metals. Every single rice sample tested had detectable arsenic, with one-quarter exceeding FDA limits set for infant rice cereal, as reported by HealthDay.
Infant Rules Don’t Apply to All
Although the FDA implemented a maximum arsenic level for infant rice cereal in 2021, no such rule exists for regular rice consumed by millions—including toddlers and young children. Researchers stress this loophole as a public health concern.
Major Brands, Major Findings
The report tested rice from 145 brands including Trader Joe’s, Ben’s, and Goya. Results showed heavy metal concentrations ranging from 63 to 188 parts per billion (ppb), with some samples reaching as high as 240 ppb. Arsenic was the most commonly found, followed by cadmium.
TOXIC ARSENIC IN RICE INCREASES WITH TEMPERATURE & CO2
— Peter D Carter (@PCarterClimate) May 16, 2025
Multiple very bad health effects.
Risk already recognized
Danger limit being exceededhttps://t.co/MIa4xewDK0#rice #climatechange. #globalwarming pic.twitter.com/Q7pTPlqcrm
Industry Response: Consumers Deserve Reassurance
The USA Rice Federation acknowledged consumer concerns but insisted current arsenic levels in rice pose no significant public health risk, as reported by HealthDay.
How to Reduce Your Risk
The report offers key tips for safer consumption:
Cook it like pasta: Drown your rice in water (6–10 cups per 1 cup of rice) and let it brew.
Switch it up: Switch to grains such as quinoa, barley, or couscous, since they contain less heavy metals.
Pick safer varieties: Look for white rice from California, sushi rice, Thai jasmine, or Basmati rice from India. Stay away from brown rice, Southern-grown white rice and arborio rice imported from Italy (Suggested Alternative: Skip those three varieties as they may contain higher levels of metals).
News
Houston Wastewater Detected Measles Weeks Before Outbreak, Study Finds

Early detection and prevention of measles can be done by monitoring for the virus in wastewater.
United States: Measles virus showed up in Houston’s sewage water several weeks before the big measles outbreak happened in Texas in January, according to a new study.
Early Warning Signs in Wastewater
Wastewater samples taken on Jan. 7 were found to have measles virus DNA in them, which was reported by scientists in the American Journal of Public Health, as reported by HealthDay.
According to the researchers, the City of Houston Health Department found and reported two cases of measles in adults not vaccinated for the disease on January 17th. The survey is based on people living in the same areas where the water treatment plants supplied water.
Measles Resurgence in Texas
In all, 717 people in Texas had measles as of May 13, reported the Texas Department of State Health Services. Two children who have not been vaccinated have died.
#Measles in the #Sewers? #WastewaterSurveillance Offers Early Warning for #Outbreaks. #Houston @BCMTailorLabs @saracregeen @MikeTisza @bcmhouston @TEPHI_Texas @RiceUNews @UTHealthSPH #AJPH https://t.co/RNxDxBIaFV @DiscoverMag pic.twitter.com/xrlAPDCbsY
— From the Labs at Baylor College of Medicine (@BCMFromtheLabs) May 15, 2025
“With lessons learned from the Houston measles detection event, we are now working with our public health partners to gather data on the current measles outbreak in West Texas,” lead researcher Michael Tisza, an assistant professor of molecular virology and microbiology at Baylor College of Medicine in Houston, said in a news release.
“Our program has been monitoring measles in wastewater from those sites as well, hoping the information can help officials get ahead of this virus,” Tisza said.
The sampled Houston treatment plans help more than 218,000 people, according to the researchers.
Researchers found that testing wastewater before an outbreak revealed that these methods can prepare officials for an infectious disease.
Wastewater Testing: A Promising Public Health Tool
“Systematically sequencing the genetic material in wastewater reveals dynamic changes in human viruses circulating in a community,” senior researcher Anthony Maresso, chair of molecular virology and microbiology at Baylor, said in a news release.
“Importantly, analyzing these viral changes in wastewater can improve our understanding of outbreaks and transmission and inform public health preparedness, just as one uses meteorological data to better understand and predict weather patterns to anticipate potentially dangerous conditions,” Maresso said.
According to the researchers, there had not been any measles viruses found in any of the 821 wastewater samples collected in Houston in the past 31 months.
“Because no other cases have been reported and the detections occurred in the same area where the travelers resided, it is reasonable to assume that the measles signal detected in wastewater is from the two infected cases, which underscores the high sensitivity of the method,” Maresso said.
Vaccination Still the Best Defense
Co-researcher Eric Boerwinkle, dean of the UTHealth Houston School of Public Health, said that “this work underscores the ability of sophisticated wastewater analyses to serve as an early detection system benefitting public health, healthcare, and communities in preventing a measles outbreak in Houston.”
If they haven’t already, Boerwinkle advised individuals to acquire the measles vaccine, as reported by HealthDay.
The best way to stop the contagion of measles is the MMR vaccine, since it has already proven to be both safe and effective.
Health
Your Smartphone Might Predict How Well You Recover from Injury

With more smartphone data, there will be better ways to predict and guide recovery in orthopedics.
United States: According to a study published on May 9 in the Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery, smartphone data — including step count, walking speed, and gait — can predict how well someone recovers from bone or hip injuries. The findings suggest that mobility patterns before an injury may offer powerful insights into a patient’s post-surgical progress, as reported by HealthDay.
Data That Speaks Volumes
The study, led by Dr. Brian Shear at the University of Maryland Medical Center, followed 107 adults who had previously undergone surgery for a broken leg or hip. Using data from participants’ Apple iPhones, researchers analyzed their pre-injury activity levels — specifically, their steps, speed, and gait — and compared it with their recovery progress.
Patients who were more active before their injury tended to recover faster and return to mobility more easily. “This novel approach has the power to reshape how orthopedic care is delivered,” Dr. Shear explained.
A New Era of Personalized Rehab
The study found that patients with higher daily step counts before their injury had better recovery outcomes. Likewise, those with faster walking speeds and consistent gait patterns pre-injury also healed more effectively — highlighting the predictive value of everyday mobility metrics.
With this knowledge, doctors are able to plan treatments better, detect possible issues in patients’ progress earlier, and give patients more precise timelines for recovery.
Expanding the Technology’s Use
Senior researcher Nathan O’Hara, associate professor at the University of Maryland School of Medicine, announced plans to broaden the study’s scope to include other areas of orthopedics like sports medicine, joint replacement, and shoulder or foot surgery, as reported by HealthDay.
An app is also under development to support this initiative, with multicenter clinical trials expected to begin later this year.
-
News3 weeks ago
Anesthesiologists Face Increasing Risk of Head Injuries in the Operating Room
-
News4 weeks ago
Toxic Bedtime? New Research Reveals Chemical Risks in Infant and Toddler Mattresses
-
News4 weeks ago
Dupixent Approved to Address Unmet Needs in Chronic Hives Treatment
-
News4 weeks ago
Overuse of Antibiotics in Early Childhood Linked to Higher Risk of Asthma and Allergies
-
News3 weeks ago
Novavax Nears Full FDA Approval for COVID Vaccine
-
News4 weeks ago
Heavy Weed Use Tied to Dopamine Surges, Psychosis
-
News3 weeks ago
FDA Approves Gene Therapy for Rare Skin Disease
-
News3 weeks ago
Could Your Newborn Be at Risk? Cord Blood Might Hold the Answer