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August 29, 2006

Salt Institute endorses efficient, expert drinking water source protection

In August 28 comments to Environment Ontario, the Salt Institute articulated principles it favors for inclusion in pending legislation to improve drinking water source protection in the Province of Ontario. Salt Institute president Richard L. Hanneman noted that the four Ontario salt production plants all operate under federal and provincial permits and recommended that source protection be integrated into the existing permitting program or, alternatively, that the new responsibilities and capabilities of regional conservation authorities include granting permits to avoid duplication. He noted the great strides that Ontario governments have made in improving their road salt management practices in recent years and recommended that the conservation authorities be encouraged to support implementation of the national Road Salts Code of Practice as the best management requirement for drinking water source protection against contamination from road salts.

August 28, 2006

Cargill Cleveland mine garners positive PR

It seems everybody wants to visit a salt mine. Small surprise, that. Cargill Deicing Technology is capitalizing on that interest to earn some valuable industry PR as this article in today's Cleveland Plain Dealer shows.

August 17, 2006

Salt and exercise

My "in" box is filling up today with news on salt and exercise, interupting (and affecting) my final edits on a story on salt and obesity. First, CBS Radio News medical consultant Dr. Gabe Mirkin wrote calling my attention to his "August" article (all senses of the word) "Why You Need Salt During Exercise" followed closely by an article filed today by Ivana Bisaro, "See Salt: You Need More Sodium Than You Think." The Bisaro article was perfect for hot August days, reminding us of the new guidelines presented by the American College of Sports Medicine calling for replacing 500-700 mg of sodium and 3/4 to 1 liter of fluid for every hour of exercise. ACSM warns to pay special attention to getting enough salt if your sodium intake is less than 3,000 mg day (US average = 3,500 mg, but some recomend 2,300 mg, below the ACSM warning level). The US Dietary Guidelines call for a half hour of at least moderate exercise a day beyond normal activities. When it's hot outside, you may need even more than the 250-350 mg of sodium called for by the ACSM.

August 12, 2006

Congress probing NIH conflicts-of-interest

House Energy and Commerce chair Joe Barton (R-TX), the committee's ranking minority member John Dingell (D-MI), oversight subcommittee chairman Ed Whitfield (R-KY) and Rep. Bart Stupak (D-MI) have called on the National Institutes of Health to come clean on conflicts of interest at the agency. The Los Angeles Times reported that the letter is focused on the activities of NIH cancer researcher Dr. Thomas J. Walsh and involves his receipt of corporate support and his appearance at regulatory hearings related to his corporate sponsors.

The effort remains the tip of the larger iceberg. Current regulations address the issues of financial conflicts with for-profit organizations, but conflicts of interest inherent in both funding and professional advancement growing from support by NIH itself is a big (perhaps, bigger) concern because its subtlety has the same effect: determining policy that may support private interests and agendas more than the public good.

August 09, 2006

Concern for bias deepens -- but fails to widen

In previous posts, I've noted that concern for investigator bias is a serious threat to the integrity of medical research -- and public confidence in the results. It's getting to the point of "piling on" for the Wall Street Journal and the editor-in-chief of the Journal of the American Medical Association to add their strong voices to the crescendo of the chorus.

But it's a lot like the future funding for Social Security: everyone recognizes a serious problem, but sometimes the remedies suggested are half-measures that will surely only paper-over the fundamental problem.

Last Friday, the Wall Street Journal ran a story "Simply Disclosing Funds Behind Studies May Not Erase Bias" about how researchers would likely deal with toughened disclosures of financial ties to for-profit firms. Tuesday, Catherine DeAngelis, JAMA's editor-in-chief weighed in with a powerful salvo in "The Influence of Money on Medical Science." Of course they're both right. Bias is a cardinal sin and must be stamped out.

Unfortunately, the remedies being discussed are focused narrowly on bias from a for-profit funding source. They ignore the bias based on funding from a non-profit or government source, though that influence can be even more pernicious because the public is gulled into believing the sponsors genuinely represent the "public interest." The truth is, there are policy and bureaucratic biases fully as important as taking money from a drug company or medical device manufacturer.

Sure, let's deepen our concern -- but let's widen it as well!

August 02, 2006

We are what we eat, part umpteen

The Journal of the American Dietitic Association has just published a study suggesting that low-energy-dense diets lead to lower overall calorie consumption. Evidence in both human and animal nutrition suggest that mineral-dense diets are associated with body leanness. It is the general consensus of nutrition professionals that our diet would be improved if it contained fewer calories and more more minerals, so the stars seem to be lining up for the "high quality" DASH Diet, developed for blood pressure reduction, but seemingly appropriate to solving a myriad of dietary problems. Could it be that sodium isn't just irrelevant (DASH), but actually part of that "high quality" mineral-dense diet?