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Childproof Your Home for Poisons
Childproof Your Home for Poisons
More than half (52 percent) of all poisonings treated in emergency departments involve children under the age of six. More than 1.1 million children ages five and under are poisoned in the US each year. Ordinary products used by adults each day around the home can become dangerous poisons in the hands of a child.
| Common Childhood Poisonings in the Home |
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| Tips to Help Reduce Unintentional Poisonings in the Home |
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Child-resistant lids will now go on certain common household products:
The Consumer Product Safety Commission has voted in 2002 to require safety caps on a variety of commonly used household products. The products, all oily hydrocarbon products, are thin and slippery and can easily suffocate children if the substances are drawn into their lungs when drinking them. The products can cause chemical pneumonia, by coating the inside of the lungs. The new regulation will take effect within 12 months. Products that will be required to have a safety lid include:
- baby oils
- sunscreens
- nail enamel dryers
- hair oils
- bath, body, and massage oils
- makeup removers
- some automotive chemicals (gasoline additives, fuel injection cleaners, and carburetor cleaners)
- cleaning solvents (wood oil cleaners, metal cleaners, spot removers, and adhesive removers)
- some water repellents containing mineral spirits used for decks, shoes, and sports equipment
- general-use household oil
- gun-cleaning solvents containing kerosene
Oil products that are thicker and more "syrupy" are not a problem, since they are not easily inhaled into the lungs.
Last Update
February 3, 2008
February 3, 2008
