The Guardian (USA)

Danger! 'Avocado hand' is on the rise – here's how to stay safe this Super Bowl

- Poppy Noor

There’s one thing that should carry a warning label this Super Bowl Sunday, but you might not get it at first guess. The avocado – more commonly known for gentrifyin­g communitie­s across countries – is poised to cause a spate of injuries this weekend.

Super Bowl Sunday is thought to be one of the year’s biggest days for avocado consumptio­n – 162m lb of avocado was consumed during last year’s big game,and many dutiful hosts serving up chips and dips this game season could be putting themselves at serious risk.

Last year, the foreboding­ly named “avocado hand” was branded an “epidemic”

of hand injury by researcher­s at Emory University, who noted a rise in such cases. If you think epidemic

sounds far-fetched, consider this: the researcher­s estimated 50,413 avocado-related knife injuries occurred between 1998 and 2017, with over half happening in the last decade. And that’s not even counting those too ashamed to go to hospital.

Avocado hand occurs when a person tries to remove the pit in a dangerous manner, such as with a knife, and ends up cutting themselves. The consequenc­es can be serious: avocado hand can result in damage to the muscles or tendons, and even the nerves in extreme cases.

(And there we all were thinking the only problem with avocados is how they are causing a crisis in millennial home ownership.)

Here are the rules on how to safely cut an avocado, according to the California

Avocado Commission.

How to safely remove an avocado stone

• Take the avocado, wash thoroughly, dry and then place on a cutting board.

• Carefully cut the avocado in half lengthwise around the pit (or seed), with the fruit flat on the cutting board.

• Rotate the avocado a quartertur­n and cut lengthwise around the pit, creating quarter avocado segments. Put down your knife.

• By separating the quarters, you can remove the pit seamlessly with your fingertips.

 ?? Photograph: Alamy ?? Avocado: the consequenc­es can be serious.
Photograph: Alamy Avocado: the consequenc­es can be serious.

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