Make Safety a Priority at the Top of the Holiday Wish List While Cooking, Decorating and Toy Buying! Important Info You Need to Know!
The OCHD and the U.S. Consumer Product Safety Commission (CPSC) remind families to take precautions whether shopping online or in-person, to keep family and friends safe from common holiday-related hazards. CPSC’s latest Toy-Related Deaths and Injuries report, reveals that in 2023 an estimated 154,700 children 12 years or younger were treated in emergency rooms due to toy-related injuries, and 10 children died in toy-related incidents.
Other key findings from the report include:
Toy-related ER-treated injuries from 2016 to 2023:
Decreased by nearly 5% for children under 15 from 175,600 to 167,500
Decreased by nearly 8% for children under 13 from 167,800 to 154,700
Non-motorized scooters
Accounted for the largest share of injuries in 2023 (53,000) across all age groups
Are involved in more than one in every five toy-related injuries for children under 15
The majority of toy-related deaths were related to:
Choking on small balls or crayons
Drownings linked to flotation toys
Entrapment inside a toy chest
Ingestion of water beads
Injury diagnoses
Lacerations were the most common toy-related injury for all ages
Contusions/abrasions and fractures were the second and third most common for all ages
Contusions/abrasions and internal injuries were the second and third most common diagnoses for children under 15 years old
Ingestion and internal injuries were the second and third most common diagnoses for children under 5 years old
Wrap your holiday with a protective bow with these giving gift safety tips:
Follow age guidance and other safety information on toy packaging and choose toys that match each child’s interests and abilities.
Get safety gear, including helmets, for scooters and other riding toys–and make sure that children use them every time.
Keep small balls and toys with small parts away from children younger than age 3 and keep deflated balloons away from children younger than age 8.
Once the gifts are open, immediately discard plastic wrappings or other packaging on toys before they become dangerous playthings.
Cooking
The largest share of the 352,400 annual residential fires is cooking-related (45%), according to CPSC’s report on Residential Fire and Loss Estimates. Cooking fires spike on Thanksgiving Day with an average of 1,400 cooking fires – more than three times the daily average of cooking fires. CPSC data also shows that Black Americans have the highest rate of deaths from fire, nearly twice the overall rate across the population.
Prep holiday cooking with these tips for a safe and fire-free holiday season:
Never leave cooking food unattended on the stove or in the oven.
Only fry a turkey outside and away from your home or other flammable materials. Never use turkey fryers in an enclosed area like the garage or on the porch.
Holiday Decorations
There are about 160 Christmas decorating-related injuries each day during the holiday season, with nearly half of the injuries involving falls. In the 2023 holiday season (Nov. 1, 2022 – Jan. 31, 2023), about 14,900 people were treated in emergency rooms due to holiday decorating-related injuries.
Keep holiday decorating safe, festive, and bright with these helpful tips:
Water your live Christmas tree and look for the “Fire Resistant” label when buying an artificial tree.
Never leave candles unattended. Keep burning candles in sight, away from flammable items and put them out before leaving the room. Use flameless candles whenever possible.
Never string together more than three sets of incandescent lights and never overload electrical outlets.
Online Toy Shopping
Know your seller. Purchase toys from stores and online retailers you know and trust.
When purchasing toys and games online that contain small parts, balls, marbles and balloons, look for a choking hazard warning statement on the firm’s advertising page about these products.
Please visit www.cpsc.gov/commissioners to search for statements related to this or other topics.