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Information Today
May 3, 2010
EPA Releases New Chemical Toxicity Database This database allows scientists and the interested public to search and download thousands of toxicity testing results on hundreds of chemicals. ToxRefDB captures 30 years and $2 billion of testing results. mark for My Articles similar articles
Information Today
June 20, 2011
EPA Releases Two New Databases With Chemical Toxicity and Exposure Data The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency has announced the release of two databases that make it easier to find data about chemicals. mark for My Articles similar articles
Chemistry World
March 30, 2009
Rebecca Trager
EPA announces new chemical toxicity plan New regulations mean the agency will now rely less on animal testing to assess toxicity and risk, focusing instead on using advanced tools from fields like genomics, molecular biology and computational sciences. mark for My Articles similar articles
Chemistry World
July 24, 2007
Richard Van Noorden
A Viable Alternative Tests on mice, rats, rabbits and guinea pigs to stop harmful chemicals reaching humans were once a necessary evil. But such checks now seem embarrassingly old-fashioned, according to a report on toxicity testing. mark for My Articles similar articles
Chemistry World
December 19, 2011
Rebecca Trager
US agencies collaborate to test 10,000 chemicals A high-speed robotic screening system jointly initiated by three key US health agencies began testing more than 10,000 chemical compounds for potential toxicity on 7 December. mark for My Articles similar articles
Chemistry World
December 8, 2015
Colacci & Kleinstreuer
Rethinking risk assessment For the purposes of regulation, the onset of adverse effects is key to determining the level of exposure that presents an unreasonable risk for humans and ecosystems. mark for My Articles similar articles
Chemistry World
January 16, 2014
The art of alternatives Recent years have seen great advances in alternatives to animal tests. Yet we still need to understand how and why compounds are toxic before we can make the giant leap to replacement. mark for My Articles similar articles
Chemistry World
May 4, 2011
Hepeng Jia
Animal testing alternatives for China 'China can lead the way in applying alternatives to animal testing,' says Melvin Andersen, a professor of toxicology from the Hamner Institute for Health Sciences, North Carolina, in the US, speaking at a Unilever sponsored meeting in Shanghai, on 14 March. mark for My Articles similar articles
Chemistry World
September 7, 2012
Rebecca Trager
EPA urged to rethink chemical risk evaluation process The US Environmental Protection Agency's process for assessing the risk of human exposure to various chemicals is deeply flawed and actually threatens public health, according to two experts with inside experience. mark for My Articles similar articles
Bio-IT World
April 15, 2003
Mark D. Uehling
Target Elimination Industry and FDA scientists turn to databases, applications software, and laboratory chips to move the safest, most effective molecules into clinical trials. mark for My Articles similar articles
Bio-IT World
Jul/Aug 2006
Eric K. Neumann
Combining Drug Toxicity Knowledge Nearly half the drugs entering clinical trials will fail because of some form of serious toxicity that was missed in preclinical studies. These failures should not happen at such a late stage in the process. So what can be done? mark for My Articles similar articles
Chemistry World
February 9, 2015
Rebecca Trager
US on track to phase out most perfluorinated chemicals this year The US Environmental Protection Agency says that the major chemical companies it has partnered with are on track to phase out production of perfluorinated chemicals in America by the end of 2015. mark for My Articles similar articles
Chemistry World
April 27, 2015
Mark Peplow
An unfortunate oversight Transparent and effective third-party oversight is one of the surest ways of securing trust in an industry. Yet in the US, where chemicals are regulated under the Toxic Substances Control Act (TSCA, pronounced 'Tosca'), that oversight is sadly lacking. mark for My Articles similar articles
Chemistry World
November 18, 2015
Emma Davies
Advancing animal testing alternatives The European Chemicals Agency has begun to ask companies to demonstrate that they have carefully considered using alternatives to animal tests. mark for My Articles similar articles
Chemistry World
November 3, 2009
Rebecca Trager
First tests for pesticide endocrine effects in US The EPA has requested that manufacturers screen seven compounds under this first round, including atrazine - a widely used herbicide that may be associated with birth defects and other problems. mark for My Articles similar articles
Scientific American
January 2006
Saving Animals and People Use of animals in testing and in biomedical research continues to be necessary and is ethically preferable to experimenting on humans or forgoing cures that could save human lives, but the development and acceptance of animal substitutes deserve enthusiastic support. mark for My Articles similar articles
Chemistry World
February 4, 2008
Rebecca Trager
EPA Rolls Out Nanomaterials Safety Drive The agency has launched a new voluntary program to glean more information about nanoscale materials in an effort to manage the risks posed by nanotechnology-enabled products. mark for My Articles similar articles
Chemistry World
April 9, 2010
Rebecca Trager
EPA seeks heightened scrutiny for 16 chemicals The US Environmental Protection Agency wants to tighten its oversight of certain chemical substances by adding 16 chemicals to its Toxics Release Inventory list. mark for My Articles similar articles
Chemistry World
July 31, 2013
Daniel Johnson
Animal testing failures put drug trial volunteers in danger The reporting of animal studies is biased, inflating the efficacy of drug candidates and pushing them into the clinic before they are ready. mark for My Articles similar articles
Chemistry World
January 29, 2009
Rebecca Trager
EPA's chemical evaluation process 'high-risk' The US government's 32-year-old law regulating chemical safety needs a complete overhaul, according to Congress' investigative arm mark for My Articles similar articles
The Motley Fool
November 30, 2007
Brian Orelli
Clinical Trial Failures Don't Bother These Companies Contract research organizations, outsourcing companies hired by pharmaceutical and biotech companies to run pre-clinical tests and clinical trials for them, succeed even when drugs fail, and more work may be coming their way. mark for My Articles similar articles
Chemistry World
December 22, 2006
Victoria Gill
Metabolic Profiling Could Improve Animal Experiments Different types of rats respond to drugs in substantially different ways that can be tracked by metabolic analysis, according to scientists who say their finding has major implications for designing animal experiments. mark for My Articles similar articles
Information Today
March 7, 2011
EBSCO Publishing to Release Chemical Hazard Information Library CHIL brings toxicology, pharmacology, occupational and public health, and chemical hazard information to corporations, government agencies, medical facilities, and academic institutions. mark for My Articles similar articles
Chemistry World
September 11, 2013
Emma Stoye
Call to overhaul liver toxicity testing Outdated assays for monitoring liver health could have caused dozens of drug candidates to be wrongly scrapped during development, according to new research. mark for My Articles similar articles
The Motley Fool
May 21, 2010
Brian Orelli
And You Thought Biotech Was High-Risk, High-Reward Large clinical trials make cardiovascular drugs risky, but the rewards are there, too. mark for My Articles similar articles
Chemistry World
June 26, 2015
Rebecca Trager
Chemical reform bill advances in US Congress The US House of Representatives has approved a bipartisan bill to revamp the nearly 40-year-old law that governs America's chemicals policy, known as the Toxic Substances Control Act. mark for My Articles similar articles
Bio-IT World
October 10, 2003
Donna Mendrick
Microarrays That Make Drugs Safe Using DNA chips to discover potential toxicity in new drug compounds -- a key application of toxicogenomics -- can predict adverse effects before they occur, enabling safer clinical trials. mark for My Articles similar articles
Bio-IT World
Dec 2006/Jan 2007
Giacomo Bastianelli
The Future of Predictive Biology Predictive biology, data and the integration of disparate research disciplines are key ingredients for the future of drug discovery research and healthcare. mark for My Articles similar articles
Chemistry World
April 29, 2013
Phillip Broadwith
Appeal reverses ECHA call for animal tests An appeal has overturned the European Chemicals Agency's request for additional animal toxicity testing on the automotive air-conditioning refrigerant 2,3,3,3-tetrafluoropropene (HFO-1234yf). mark for My Articles similar articles
Chemistry World
January 26, 2010
Rebecca Renner
EPA targets chemical confidentiality loopholes The US Environmental Protection Agency is taking a tougher stance on confidentiality claims that allow firms to prevent the names of chemicals identified as potential health risks being made available to the public. mark for My Articles similar articles
Chemistry World
November 2006
Derek Lowe
Opinion: In the Pipeline Is there a way to kill off bad drug candidates before companies invest valuable time and money and in them? mark for My Articles similar articles
Chemistry World
December 1, 2014
Derek Lowe
Progress at the pace of the slowest Chemistry is a means to an end in drug research, not an end in itself, and that can take some getting used to. It's worth thinking about where chemistry fits into the big picture. mark for My Articles similar articles
Chemistry World
March 4, 2008
Rebecca Trager
Controversy Over EPA Removal of Top Toxicologist The US Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) is being accused of caving to pressure from the chemical industry after dismissing Deborah Rice from a scientific review panel following protests from the American Chemistry Council. mark for My Articles similar articles
Chemistry World
April 14, 2011
Sarah Farley
Fish in chips: growing embryos in microfluidic systems Scientists in the Netherlands and the UK have shown for the first time that an animal embryo can develop in a microfluidic environment. mark for My Articles similar articles
AskMen.com
Richard Stevens
Participating In Clinical Trials Check out what participating in clinical trials involves and how you can join a study. You may even make some cash in the process. mark for My Articles similar articles
Chemistry World
May 30, 2013
Rebecca Trager
Industry applauds US chemical reform bill The US chemical industry is backing bipartisan legislation that would reform the law that controls chemical sales in the US for the first time since its enactment in 1976. But environmental groups do not share the enthusiasm. mark for My Articles similar articles
Chemistry World
May 13, 2014
Rebecca Trager
EPA improves embattled chemical assessment program The US Environmental Protection Agency has made 'substantial improvements' to its program to assess the health hazards posed to people by pollution, but the National Research Council is urging further reforms in a new report. mark for My Articles similar articles
Chemistry World
June 23, 2009
Rebecca Trager
EPA halts its chemical review effort The US Environmental Protection Agency is reevaluating its existing chemicals assessment framework and has suspended its Chemical Assessment and Management Program. mark for My Articles similar articles
Chemistry World
April 16, 2010
Rebecca Trager
Congress proposes toxic chemical regulation reforms The US Congress launched a much anticipated effort to update the nation's 34-year-old law governing new and already existing toxic chemicals yesterday. mark for My Articles similar articles
Chemistry World
June 13, 2011
Rebecca Trager
EPA discloses confidential chemical information The US Environmental Protection Agency has made public company data on over 150 chemicals used in more than 100 health and safety studies. mark for My Articles similar articles
Chemistry World
July 26, 2012
Andrew Turley
New US chemical rules edge nearer A political committee in the US has voted in favor of plans to change the way chemicals are regulated by shifting the burden of proving safety to manufacturers. mark for My Articles similar articles
Chemistry World
May 28, 2008
Rebecca Trager
Changes to US chemical review procedures flawed Recent changes to the US Environmental Protection Agency's (EPA) main tool for assessing the health effects of chemicals could significantly lengthen the time needed to review them, a congressional watchdog has warned. mark for My Articles similar articles
Chemistry World
September 25, 2008
Rebecca Trager
EPA suspends two studies on children The US Environmental Protection Agency has canceled funding for two studies during which babies and young children would have been exposed to pesticides and other chemicals because of ethical concerns. mark for My Articles similar articles
Chemistry World
January 2012
Column: In the pipeline Derek Lowe discusses how companies are increasingly trying to do more with the compounds they already know a lot about mark for My Articles similar articles
The Motley Fool
July 20, 2005
Stephen D. Simpson
Pfizer's Long Road Back It took time for Pfizer to reach a trough and it will take time to climb out. But over the long haul this could prove to be a solid pick. mark for My Articles similar articles
Bio-IT World
August 13, 2002
Mark D. Uehling
Clinical Trial Data Management: Tortured by Paper Reams of paper stuffed into boxes and shipped to the FDA by the truckload is hardly the best approach to drug approval. But what's the right way? mark for My Articles similar articles
Chemistry World
January 11, 2010
Helen Carmichael
EPA: Bankrupt chemical firms must pay for site clean up The US Environmental Protection Agency has tabled new proposals to prevent taxpayers footing the environmental clean up bills for cash-strapped chemical companies. mark for My Articles similar articles
Chemistry World
October 1, 2008
Rebecca Trager
US to Overhaul Industrial Chemicals Inventory A plan by the US Environmental Protection Agency to overhaul its inventory of industrial chemicals could lead to a lot more paperwork for chemical firms, industry officials have warned. mark for My Articles similar articles
Chemistry World
May 24, 2012
Rebecca Trager
EPA's chemical assessment program The US National Academy of Sciences will conduct a 'comprehensive examination' of the assessment process that underlies the EPA's Integrated Risk Information System, through which the agency provides health data on over 550 chemical substances. mark for My Articles similar articles
Chemistry World
April 9, 2015
Big problems with little particles? There is a risk that poor toxicology studies could start undermining the success of nanomaterials. mark for My Articles similar articles