| Position: Home>Children> |
| Position: Home>Children> |
ATLANTA - At least one U.S. child has died and 19 others have needed surgery since 2003 after swallowing magnets used in toys, the government reported Thursday. Most of those cases were believed to involve tiny but strong "rare earth" magnets that can link together in children's digestive tracts, squeezing and even perforating the intestines, the researchers said. The magnets, made from neodymium iron boron or other compounds, have become common in the U.S. toy market in the past five years because they have become cheaper to produce, said Jonathan Midgett, the study's lead author and an engineering psychologist with the U.S. Consumer Product Safety Commission. They are used in building sets, action figures and dolls. "Most people who have never had them in their hands are shocked at how strong these tiny things are," Midgett said. Kenny Sweet, a 20-month-old boy from Redmond, Wash., died in two days after he began complaining of stomach aches and vomiting. An autopsy found nine small magnets stacked together. They had caused a twisting of the bowel and a blood infection. The magnets had come off a building set belonging to Kenny's 10-year-old brother, according to his family's lawyers. Mega Brands Inc. recalled 3.8 million Magnetix building sets, added warning labels and agreed to pay $13.5 million to settle lawsuits. Last month, Mattel Inc. recalled more than 4 million Polly Pocket play sets, dolls with small magnets in their hands, feet, clothing and other accessories. Last month, the U.S. Public Interest Research Group for the first time included the magnets on its annual holiday warning about dangerous toys. Midgett said federal and industry officials hope to have a warning label ready within six months for toys containing magnets. ?2006 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed. |
|
Top Stories
Surprise hope for recovery from Rett syndrome Stunning experiment reverses autism-relate
Dads' comments may push girls toward bulimia Parental criticism and weight worries affec
Mismatched hearts save babies' lives Lack of immune rejection fuels wrong-blood-type tra
Warning on diarrhea vaccine for infants Twisting of intestines reported after babies rec
Infants form memories early, but also forget Babies lose the information faster than adu
Parents urged to donate newborn's cord blood Can be used for bone marrow transplants to
|
|
Related
Cough medicine drug a hallucinogen for teens Abuse of ingredient in over-the-counter pro Wildfires may be making children sick California blazes linked to respiratory ailments i Docs blast inappropriate ads for children Commercials to blame for many ills from obesit Doctors: Skip antibiotics for child ear infections 'Watchful waiting' OK for common illn
New guidelines for sedating children Doctors, dentists need training to act quickly in c
FDA OKs Celebrex as treatment for children Drug can be used for juvenile rheumatoid arth
N.H. first state to offer girls free cancer vaccine Starting in January, program will pr
Teens turn to cough syrup to get high, feds say Prescription abuse rising; alcohol, ille
|

LOOKING
FOR
ADVERTISEMENT
