Category: Legal News

Stand’n Seal Grout Sealer – Deadly and Defective Product

Approximately 200 people have filed lawsuits against Home Depot and the manufacturer of Stand ‘n Seal grout sealer after falling ill from using Stand ‘n Seal. People are complaining of severe breathing problems after using the grout sealer, including chemical pneumonia. One man, Dr. Walter Friedel, said he became so ill he was in the intensive care unit for 4 days and was on oxygen for 4 months. He still has difficulty walking up flights of stairs and hills.

Continue reading “Stand ‘n Seal Grout Sealer Linked to Chemical Pneumonia”

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Lead Poisoning and Children – New Government Sponsored Programs

?Lead poisoning can cause learning disabilities, behavioral problems, seizures and death, according to the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency. It is especially harmful to fetuses and young children.
Most children are exposed to dangerous levels of lead when they live in homes built before 1978 – the year on which lead based paints were banned due to health concerns. Federal and state governments are sponsoring programs to reduce and eradicate the problem. As an example, a $2.9 million federal grant will enable the city of Indianapolis to provide for lead tests for children, lead dust kits for families and construction on about 400 housing units as part of a Lead Hazard Reduction Demonstration program.

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Medtronic Warns Doctors Of Faulty Heart Defibrillator Component

The nation’s largest maker of implanted heart devices, Medtronic, said Sunday that it is urging doctors to stop using a crucial component because it is prone to a defect that has apparently been linked to five deaths and has malfunctioned in hundreds of patients.

The faulty component is an electrical “lead,” or a wire that connects the heart to a defibrillator, a device that shocks faltering hearts back into normal rhythm. The company is urging all of the roughly 235,000 patients with the lead, known as the Sprint Fidelis, to see their doctors to make sure it has not developed a fracture that can cause the device to misread heart-rhythm data.

Such a malfunction can cause the device to either deliver an unnecessary electrical jolt or fail to provide a life-saving one to a patient in need. In most cases, the defibrillators can be reprogrammed without surgery to minimize the likelihood of faulty shocks.

Replacing leads on a heart device like a defibrillator is considered by experts to be far more dangerous than replacing the device itself. As a result, doctors said that patients are better off leaving the lead in place except in those instances where it has ceased to function.

Medtronic estimated that about 2.3 percent of patients with the Fidelis lead, or between 4,000 to 5,000 people, will experience a lead fracture within 30 months of implantation. Those patients will need to have the lead replaced, experts said.? Read more here

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Man Spared Prison Time In Fatal Car Accident

A judicial marshal was spared prison time today in an accident in Marlborough two years ago that killed an 81-year-old woman.

John Hubert, 43, of Waterbury was given a suspended, six-month sentence and one year of probation in Superior Court in Manchester. He was off-duty when he fatally struck Lourance H. Stevens while driving around, trying to find a bathroom for his wife.

Judge Raymond Norko told Hubert he must not break any motor vehicle laws and must contribute $1,000 to the Marlborough Senior Center in Stevens’ name.

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Crash Alley Section of I-95 Could Face Design Changes

A perpetually congested stretch of Interstate 95 — known by locals as “crash alley” — could face some changes. Backups along I-95 between Old Lyme and New London near exit 74 are common. The state Department of Transportation described the 12.3-mile stretch as a funnel because three lanes merge to two. This funneling has led to multiple car accidents over the years. Proposals including the widening of the highway are now being made to alleviate the problem.

To read more about car accidents, see our website section on car accidents.

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