Two former employees of a leading international testing laboratory used by major Australian sunscreen brands have blown the whistle on alleged questionable data and incorrect testing practices, amid ...
He was the first to use PCR testing on crime-scene DNA, inspiring a practice that has freed thousands of wrongfully convicted people.
Sarah Ferguson presents Australia's premier daily current affairs program, delivering agenda-setting public affairs journalism and interviews that hold the powerful to account. Plus political analysis ...
A sunscreen scandal in Australia is continuing to grow, with 18 products now pulled from shelves in the skin cancer hotspot over safety concerns. Analysis by a consumer advocacy group in June found ...
Bio-Rad Laboratories, Inc., a global leader in life science research and clinical diagnostics products, and Gencurix, Inc., a leading Korean developer of oncology testing solutions, today announced ...
Australian regulators have confirmed that nearly 20 new sunscreen brands have been withdrawn from sale after tests showed they fell far short of their advertised levels of protection, deepening a ...
People should check which testing laboratory the sunscreen manufacturer has used on the Consumer NZ database, she said. "So long as a sunscreen has been tested by a reputable laboratory it should be ...
Alarm about sunscreens was first sounded in June when the consumer advocacy group Choice tested 20 popular products marketed as SPF50 or higher and found that 16 fell far short of providing the ...
Molecular Designs, a developer and manufacturer of molecular infectious disease assays, today announced it has submitted a 510(k) premarket notification for its Simplicity™Dx Respiratory Panel to the ...
Following Choice's investigation into the SPF claims of popular Australian sunscreens, 21 have been recalled by the TGA.
In this interview, Dr. Denise Teber, a scientific expert in molecular biology at Charles River Laboratories, discusses how ddPCR is being used to improve contamination risk management.
Named “sunscreengate2025” online, a total of 21 sunscreens have been pulled or paused from sale on Australian shelves since a scathing report by Choice.