The Borneo Post

The toys you should never gift to children, according to ER doctors

- Lindsey Bever & Kelyn Soong

WHEN shopping for toys, we often want to pick something fun. But can some of them also be dangerous?

According to emergency room physicians, they can be. In a video that went viral on TikTok, Meghan Martin, a pediatric emergency medicine physician at Johns Hopkins All Children’s Hospital in St. Petersburg, Fla., said certain gifts can land children in the ER.

“It’s important to know the risks,” Martin said in a phone interview, adding that it’s up to parents to make decisions based off that informatio­n.

Toy-related injuries accounted for about 145,500 emergency room visits for children ages 12 and younger in 2022, according to data from the US Consumer Product Safety Commission.

So which toys pose the highest risks? The Washington Post asked ER doctors across the country that question and how adults can help keep children safe.

Water beads

These brightly colored beads grow exponentia­lly when immersed in water, making them popular sensory toys. But emergency room doctors and safety experts caution against them.

Young children may put the beads in their ears, nostrils or, worse, their mouths. When swallowed, the beads can continue to absorb water and grow in the intestinal tract, leading to blockages and lifethreat­ening injuries, said Sarah Combs, an emergency medicine physician and director of outreach for the emergency department at Children’s National Hospital in Washington, D.C.

In her emergency room, Combs said she has not personally seen these beads caught in the gut, but has seen them in the ears and nose.

Such objects are usually pulled out with a specialise­d tool, but sometimes, because the beads are “slippery and expanded, we can’t,” Combs said. In those cases, children may require surgery to remove the beads, she said.

Toys with magnets and button batteries

Toys with magnets or button or coin batteries are choking hazards, but many parents don’t know they can cause severe internal damage or even death.

“If you swallow a battery or magnet, you can get decreased blood supply to areas of the bowel or tissue necrosis - the death of body tissue,” said Kerri Layman, the chief of emergency medicine at MedStar Georgetown University Hospital in Washington, D.C.

Swallowing button batteries can also lead to burns, she said.

This happens when a button battery comes into contact with saliva or other bodily fluids. The current in the battery causes a reaction that can burn a hole in the tissue.

The most serious issues typically occur in the esophagus, Layman said, because the batteries can get stuck at the narrow area behind the thoracic inlet, which is between the neck and the chest.

Be mindful that children can get access to the batteries even when they are enclosed.

“Sometimes the screws holding button batteries in place may be loose and fall out,” Layman said.

But generally, “those that are screwed in properly are much more safe than those that are just accessed via a tab closure.”

Electric scooters and hoverboard­s

Don’t buy electric vehicles such as scooters and hoverboard­s for children, emergency room doctors and safety experts say.

They can go fast, “and you don’t really want a child careening at those speeds,” Combs said.

That can lead to broken bones. These fractures can usually be reset in the emergency room but may require surgery in more serious cases, Combs said.

Nonmotoris­ed scooters are considered a safer choice, though they are a leading cause of injuries: In 2022, they were the product associated with the largest number of toy-related injuries - about 23,000 injuries among children ages 12 and younger, according to the Consumer Product Safety Commission. But because nonmotoriz­ed scooters travel at slower speeds, the injuries that come from them are usually less severe, Combs said.

When giving children nonmotoriz­ed bikes and regular scooters, provide safety gear to go with it, Combs said.

“Make sure you’re also gifting a helmet and appropriat­e padding and make sure that helmet is something the kid is going to want to wear,” she said.

“Pick one in their favorite color or pick one with a cool character on it to incentivis­e safe play when they’re using the toy.”

Trampoline­s

Although kids love them, trampoline­s are a common cause of a wide range of injuries.

The most common ones that Joanna S. Cohen, a pediatric emergency medicine physician at Johns Hopkins Hospital in Baltimore, has seen are sprained ankles and broken arms.

This usually occurs, she said, when more than one child is jumping and they collide with each other.

Injuries can also occur from falling on the springs or the frame of the trampoline, falling off the trampoline or attempting flips or other ‘risky’ stunts and landing incorrectl­y, Cohen added.

Martin said young children have also come into the hospital with lower leg injuries, usually a fracture in the tibia, from bouncing on trampoline­s.

This can happen when a child is jumping on the trampoline by themselves, but it’s more common when there are two people of different sizes.

“The person that is larger is creating more force, and that force is being exerted on the smaller person,” Martin said.

Getting an in-ground trampoline or having a net around it may reduce the risk of falling off, but it provides only a false sense of security, Martin said.

Rocket launchers and other projectile­s

Toys that shoot projectile­s, such as rocket launchers, toy guns or slingshots, can cause various injuries, including to the eyes.

The toy may inadverten­tly go off during play, launching a projectile and hurting the child’s eye, causing a severe close-range injury, Combs said.

“Please don’t buy projectile­s that shoot small pieces at children,” Cohen said.

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