Albuquerque Journal

Some fireworks are more damaging

Shell-and-mortar explosives found to lead to serious injuries

- BY SCOTT GREENSTONE THE SEATTLE TIMES

SEATTLE — Mike Spencer lit the fuse and held the firework above his head. It was a shell-and-mortar-style firework, and directions on the box usually say to put the barrel-like mortar on the ground pointing skyward, pop in the grenade-like shell, light the fuse — and run.

But Spencer, who was visiting his girlfriend in Bigfork, Mont., held it in his hands instead.

Then, “Bang!” The shell never left its tube.

“My hands felt warm,” Spencer said. “I looked at them and just saw red.”

That’s the last thing he remembers of April 30, 2015.

According to friends, he took off running after the explosion and had to be tackled.

He regained consciousn­ess the next day at Harborview Medical Center in Seattle, where he had been airlifted because of the severity of his injuries.

He lost one finger on his right hand and three on his left.

Spencer is one data point in a study by Harborview’s Injury Prevention and Research Center of 10 years of patients who came through its doors for firework injuries between 2005-2015.

Researcher­s found that nearly 40 percent of injuries came from shell-and-mortar style fireworks like the one that hurt Spencer.

Since 1999, about 10,500 people have been treated for firework-related injuries every year in the U.S., according to the U.S. Consumer Product Safety Commission.

But there’s not much data on what types of fireworks cause the most severe injuries, said Dr. Monica Vavilala, director of the Harborview Injury Prevention and Research Center. Most studies focus on the danger inherent in all fireworks, according to researcher­s.

“That doesn’t give you the sense of how serious these injuries are,” Vavilala said. “Here are the consequenc­es, here’s what’s happening to real people.”

The typical person to suffer an injury in this study is a 20to 30-year-old man. But lots of these injuries also happen to bystanders, according to Dr. Brinkley Sandvall, a plastic and reconstruc­tive surgeon who worked on the study.

Seventy-eight percent of patients in the study had burns, 43 percent had fractures and 59 percent had soft-tissue injuries. Twenty-one percent of patients had eye injuries, and 70 percent of those lost some or all of their vision. Of the 294 patients examined in the study, 11 had an eye removed, and 67 had a hand injury requiring at least one finger amputation.

“Fireworks don’t usually just burn,” Sandvall said. “The explosion rips through skin and muscle and bone.”

 ?? DREAMSTIME ?? Shell-and-mortar style fireworks disfigure more people than any other type.
DREAMSTIME Shell-and-mortar style fireworks disfigure more people than any other type.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States