Kids At Risk For Elevator Injuries
Study: More Than 1,900 Kids And Teens Are Injured By Elevators In U.S. Each Year
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(AP)
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Indiana University pediatrician Joseph O'Neil, M.D., MPH, and colleagues reviewed elevator injury data from the U.S. Consumer Product Safety Commission. The data came from 98 hospital emergency rooms nationwide.
Using that data, O'Neil's team estimated how many babies, kids, and teens were injured in U.S. elevators between 1990 and 2004.
During the study period, 2.5 per 100,000 kids and teens were injured on elevators, usually when elevator doors closed on them. Most injuries involved bruises, scrapes, sprains, and strains on the upper extremities — the arms, hands, elbows, wrists, and fingers. After the upper extremities, the head was the most commonly injured body part for kids aged 4 or younger.
Nearly all patients were treated and released from the hospitals' emergency departments. But 2 percent were hospitalized, mainly for head injuries or injury to a hand or finger.
About 26 percent of elevator injuries happened in 1- and 2-year-olds, more than any other age group. Kids that age typically start walking and becoming more independent, but they may not yet know how to stay safe on elevators.
"Young children, especially younger than 5 years of age, often lack the strength, coordination, balance, and protective reflexes needed to avoid an elevator-related injury," O'Neil's team writes.
If kids see grown-ups blocking elevator doors, they may imitate them, which may lead to injury, note the researchers. Of course, blocking elevator doors isn't a proper use of elevators at any age.
O'Neil and colleagues offer four tips on elevator safety:
Their findings appear in the "online first" edition of the journal Clinical Pediatrics.
- Keeping your toddler safe is a challenge. Talk with other moms and dads on WebMD's Parenting 2-Year-Olds message board.
By Miranda Hitti
Reviewed by Louise Chang, M.D.
© 2007, WebMD Inc. All rights reserved.
- Must be nothing important to do in the medical research field...give me a break. What a completely stupid and worthless story.
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- It's not that children are at risk from elevators, it's that children are at risk from not being supervised by theri parents, or that their parents teach them very bad habits. 90% of all elevator injuries are caused by the people themselves, not by faulty elevators, people walking in to the doors, people not watching where they are walking and getting a heel stuck between the doors, kids playing causing the elevators to stop between floors, and then trying to get out themselves instead of waiting for help
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