Church & Dwight Initiates Voluntary Recall of Select Vitamins Due to Isolated Manufacturing Issue
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EWING, N.J., April 20, 2021 /PRNewswire/ Church & Dwight Co., Inc. (NYSE:CHD) today initiated a voluntary recall of select vitafusion gummy products after the Company s investigation of two consumer reports identified the possible presence of a metallic mesh material in product lots manufactured in a four-day period between October 29 and November 3, 2020. The Company is not aware of any reports of consumer illness or injury to-date. In some severe cases, ingesting a metallic material could lead to damage of the digestive tract.
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Laurence Ball
The crisis has left deep scars, which will affect both supply and demand for many years to come.
Blanchard (2012)
The Covid-19 pandemic in the US has led to volumes of initial claims for unemployment and unemployment rates not seen since the Great Depression period, pushing the economy into a recession. As policymakers map out potential recovery paths, much of the debate tends to focus on short-run and medium-run implications. Can we hope for a ‘V-shaped’ rebound, at least once vaccines have been widely distributed, or will it take a long time between economic decline and subsequent recovery akin to a ‘U-shaped’ rebound or worse (Baldwin and di Mauro 2020, An and Loungani 2020)? What has received less attention are the potential long-run implications. History tells us that economic crises like the current one can alter consumer behaviour in the long-run – beyond the effects captured by standard economic variables such as current employment and employment p
by Chantal Allam March 15, 2021 .
RALEIGH – Long dismissed as a technology of the distant future, artificial intelligence was a project consigned to the fringes of the scientific community. Then two researchers changed everything.
In his new book,
Genius Makers, Cade Metz traces how their ideas drove a new kind of arms race, spanning Google, Microsoft, Facebook, and OpenAI, a new lab founded by Silicon Valley kingpin Elon Musk.
On Tuesday, the Raleigh native and NY Times technology correspondent will hold a virtual launch at Quail Ridge Books. WRAL TechWire’s Chantal Allam had the chance to find out more. Here’s what he had to say: