Here are some of the latest health and medical news developments, compiled by the editors of HealthDay:

Toxic Metal Cadmium Found in Chain-Store Jewelry

The toxic metal cadmium has been found in adult jewelry sold at a number of U.S. national retailers, according to the Center for Environmental Health.

Prolonged exposure to cadmium can cause cancer and reproductive problems, the Associated Press reported.

Tests showed that some jewelry sold with women’s dresses and shirts was nearly pure cadmium, according to the Oakland-based nonprofit group. Stores selling the jewelry include Ross, Nordstrom Rack and Papaya.

A number of states banned cadmium in children’s jewelry, but none have laws about cadmium in adult jewelry, the AP reported.

The Center for Environmental Health bought adult jewelry from retail stores in the San Francisco Bay Area this year and last and sent the items for lab testing. The results showed that 31 were at least 40 percent cadmium, and most were more than 90 percent.

How the findings apply nationwide is unclear, but national retailers would not normally sell a product in just one region, the AP reported.

The problem should not be underestimated due to the fact that the jewelry was bought in only one region, according to the center.

“If you’re the person that buys and is wearing that jewelry, you don’t really care whether it’s a common problem or a rare problem,” Caroline Cox, senior scientist at the center, told the AP. “You have a problem.”

The test results do not suggest a wider problem, according to Brent Cleaveland, executive director of the Fashion Jewelry and Accessories Trade Association. Most major retailers carefully test and analyze what they sell, he told the AP.

—–

Aetna-CVS Merger Approved

A $69 billion merger between health insurer Aetna and pharmacy manager CVS Health has been approved, the U.S. Justice Department said Wednesday.

Under the approval, Aetna must sell off its private Medicare drug plans, The New York Times reported.

CVS Health was the last of the large independent pharmacy managers to reach a deal with a major insurer.

Last month, the Justice Department approved insurer Cigna’s takeover of pharmacy manager Express Scripts, The Times reported.

The companies involved in these mergers say they will improve coordination of care for consumers, but critics say consumers could be left with far fewer choices and potentially higher costs.

“This type of consolidation in a market already dominated by a few, powerful players presents the very real possibility of reduced competition that harms consumer choice and quality,” George Slover, senior policy counsel for the advocacy group Consumers Union, said in a statement, The Times reported.

Posted: October 2018

Source: Read Full Article