Yorkshire Post

Surgeon reveals rise of ‘avocado hand’

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AN EMINENT plastic surgeon has suggested that avocados should carry warning labels following a rise in the number of knife injuries from cutting into the fruit.

Simon Eccles, honorary secretary of the British Associatio­n of Plastic, Reconstruc­tive and Aesthetic Plastic Surgeons, said he treated about four patients a week at Chelsea and Westminste­r Hospital for wounds caused by an avocado accident, with staff dubbing the injury “avocado hand”.

Mr Eccles told The Times: “People do not anticipate that the avocados they buy can be very ripe and there is minimal understand­ing of how to handle them.

“We don’t want to put people off the fruit but I think warning labels are an effective way of dealing with this.

“It needs to be recognisab­le. Perhaps we could have a cartoon picture of an avocado with a knife, and a big red cross going through it?”

David Shewring, vice-president of the British Society for Surgery of the Hand, also told the newspaper: “Recently the health benefits of avocado have been advocated, with an increase in their popularity – and a consequent increase in related injuries.”

Figures from New Zealand’s accident compensati­on scheme show 303 people lodged claims over three years for avocado injuries, with NZ dollars 87,527 (£47,000) paid out in that period.

Actor Meryl Streep was photograph­ed with a bandaged hand in 2012, later revealing she injured herself while cutting an avocado.

The generally accepted safest way to cut an avocado is to slice it in half length-ways before lowering the knife firmly into the stone and lifting it out.

 ??  ?? MERYL STREEP: The actress revealed that she injured herself while cutting an avocado in 2012.
MERYL STREEP: The actress revealed that she injured herself while cutting an avocado in 2012.

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