If Monster Is Recklessly Endangering Consumers, So Is Starbucks
"Monster Energy Drinks Cited in Death Reports," says the headline over a Bloomberg News story. The article notes that shares in the company "fell 14 percent to $45.73 at the close of New York trading, erasing all the gains the stock had made this year." The basis for the story, and presumably for the drop in Monster's stock price: "adverse event" reports to the FDA that Kevin Goldberg, a Silver Spring, Maryland, lawyer who is suing Monster, shared with Bloomberg. Goldberg's lawsuit, filed last week, alleges that a 14-year-old girl named Anais Fournier died of cardiac arrhythmia caused by an overdose of caffeine after drinking two 24-ounce cans of Monster drinks during one 24-hour period. The Associated Press press reports that Fournier "had an inherited disorder that can weaken blood vessels."
Although Goldberg cites the adverse event reports to back up his allegation that the caffeine content of Monster drinks poses a predictable and unacceptable risk to consumers, they actually suggest the opposite. Bloomberg counts 37 reports involving Monster energy drinks, including six fatalities, since 2004—an average of about four a year. By comparison, the FDA receives thousands of such reports about aspirin each year and hundreds about coffee. And as Bloomberg notes in the 12th paragraph, "the claims…don't prove causation." They show only that someone experienced a symptom after consuming a product, not that the latter caused the former.
How does the caffeine content of Monster drinks compare to those of other widely consumed beverages? According to Energy Fiend, most Monster varieties have 10 milligrams of caffeine per fluid ounce. (The Mayo Clinic concurs.) That's more than twice as much as Mountain Dew (4.5 mg/ounce) but 44 percent less than drip coffee (about 18 mg/ounce) and one-fifth as much as espresso (around 50 mg/ounce). At a concentration of 10mg/ounce, a 24-ounce can of Monster would contain substantially less caffeine than a large (16-ounce) Starbucks coffee. If Monster is recklessly endangering consumers, so is Starbucks.
[Thanks to Mark Lambert and Ron Steiner for the tip.]
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By comparison, the FDA receives thousands of such reports about aspirin each year and hundreds about coffee.
I'm sure all of this will be relayed to consumers and investors through responsible journalism and that our legislators and regulators will refrain from inventing a crisis for the sake of job security.
Reading that this came from Bloomberg News reminded me of Nanny Bloomy's Big-Gulp ban.
Good time to buy MNST. Just saying.
One should always err on the side of paying lawyer's fees...urm, I mean, the side of caution.
This is because Nothing bad should happen ever.
No, this is because a scumbag lawyer sees the potential to cash in on a girl's death using public health scares about energy drinks.
That's all.
Can I sue the government for the anxiety it's caused me?
Nope. Unqualified immunity.
Can I sue you over the anxiety you cause me?
Nope. You can't serve me notice if you can't find me.
Dispatches hit squad to Beltown.
Good thing right now I'm in South Lake Unio...ah ha ha, you almost got me there.
(looks around furtively)
As in, "because we say so, slave."
Apparently the girl was suffering from Ehlers-Danlos syndrome - it's a rare condition, but from the looks of it you probably shouldn't be taking any caffeine with that illness.
Monster Energy should have known that.
Warning labels.
Why? There are no warning labels on tea or coffee either.
Sure there are.
WARNING. HOT.
They already have them:.
http://media.photobucket.com/i.....neback.jpg
If I am buying coffee, I am going to Dunkin' Donuts.
Caffeine, what a notch on the prohibitionist belt that would be.
Not even a Mormon would dare try that shit.
The question has been asked
You know, that shit pisses me off to no end. When I was training for Ironman-distance triathlons, I followed a USAT-devised training regimen. And that training regimen included taking large doses of caffeine prior to certain activities. The LAT is both wildly inaccurate and irresponsible putting a story like that out there. Caffeine can be bad, but so can too much flour in your diet if not eaten in the right quantities.
Jesus Christ, I hate nannies. I hate them as much as any other group of shitheads out there.
Nannies?
Or cops?
Cops are the biggest nannies of them all. They have the monopoly on state-sanctioned violence to impose their will on people in addition to the support of every pants-shitting pussy out there that fears liberty.
I love you man!
(In a totally platonic heterosexual sort of way)
I know.
/Garth Algar
Party on.
That has to be the most hilariously flawed study I've ever seen. Power of suggestion != auditory hallucination.
Molon labe!
"Caffeine: The Devil's, uh, the Devil's *chemical compound*. Nah. Caffeine: The beverage component with roots, no, *bonds* in Hell. Dammit, nope. Wait ... *Caf-fiend! Yeah, that's the ticket!"
*** takes big sip of something ***
If Monster is recklessly endangering consumers, so is Starbucks.
Don't give them any ideas.
I wish I had discovered caffeine at 14. I never heard a word a teacher said prior to 10 AM until my junior year in college. Of course, now I live on the stuff.
(sips his Red Bull and vodka)
Mountain Dew since 8th grade. I have no teeth, but I've not slept through life.
Is there a debate on tonight?
*returns to the Leos v Da Bearsss*
TSN 2 is showing the 2010 Winter Olympic Gold Medal Hockey game.
By "debate," do you mean the deciding game in the NLCS?
Los Gigantes 1
Los Cardinals 0
Top 2nd, 1st and 3rd with one out.
Sounds like one heck of a plan dude!
http://www.ko-privacy.tk
varietities
Bloomberg counts 37 reports involving Monster energy drinks.. an average of about half a dozen a year. By comparison, the FDA receives thousands of such reports about aspirin each year and hundreds about coffee.
To be fair, a lot more people use aspirin and drink coffee than drink Monster.
FTA: The log of adverse incident reports was given to Bloomberg News by Kevin Goldberg, a lawyer representing the parents of the 14-year-old girl who died
Walter Olson at Overlawyered.com regularly criticizes this sort of "news reporting" - this story wasn't written by a reporter, it was written by the plaintiffs' attorney.
I'm surprised they haven't target Taurine yet. That's the real NOZ for the human engine. Btw the new Four Loko + 5 hour energy combo has proven effective as old Four Loko....but lacks an enthusiasm for getting arrested. Just saying.
thank you