Close X
Wednesday, November 27, 2024
ADVT 
Life

Toppled Tvs Causing Serious Injuries - And Deaths - In Young Kids: Study

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 29 Sep, 2015 12:42 PM
    TORONTO — There's an often unrecognized hazard lurking in most Canadian homes that poses a potentially deadly threat to young children — the big-screen TV.
     
    Those top-heavy, flat-screen televisions can topple over onto children, crush their tiny bodies and in the worst-case scenario, fatally cave in their skulls, researchers say.
     
    "The kids who are at the biggest risk are toddlers, so one- to three-year-olds," said Dr. Michael Cusimano, a neurosurgeon at St. Michael's Hospital.
     
    "They're occurring in older kids as well, but these injuries can be extremely severe in the younger kids — and they can be fatal."
     
    In a review of 29 studies from seven countries published Tuesday in the Journal of Neurosurgery: Pediatrics, Cusimano and co-author Nadine Parker found that tens of thousands of children have been harmed by falling TVs, an occurrence that is becoming increasingly common.
     
    In the U.S., for instance, the Consumer Product Safety Commission reported 19,200 TV-related injuries from 2008 to 2010, up from 16,500 between 2006 and 2008.
     
    The Toronto researchers determined that about 85 per cent of these injuries occurred in the home and more than three-quarters were not witnessed by a parent or caregiver.
     
    "TVs are often placed on unstable bases, placed on high furniture like dressers, which aren't designed for TVs, or (are) not properly secured to the wall," said Cusimano.
     
    "Meanwhile, parents are getting busier and busier and don't have as much time to supervise children, so it's not surprising that these injuries are getting reported more often."
     
    He said accidents often happen when toddlers climb up on a piece of furniture that holds the TV. Somewhat older children may run into the furniture while horsing around and cause the television to fall on them.
     
    "They're not being secured properly, they're not being used on the proper furniture," Cusimano said of big-screen TVs, which have become increasingly larger and less expensive over time.
     
    "I heard of one case where (the family) had it on top of an aquarium, and the TV came down and crushed the child," he said. "The child died."
     
    A 2005 study led by pediatric neurosurgeon Dr. James Drake at the Hospital for Sick Children in Toronto showed 18 children, aged 12 months to 10 years old, had been treated for a range of injuries due to falling TVs between 1992 and 2005. Sixteen of them had skull fractures.
     
    Some of the children were left with short- and long-term symptoms, from neurological deficits causing severe disability to hearing loss and facial paralysis.
     
    One two-year-old, who was treated at Sick Kids following submission of the study to the Journal of Neurosurgery: Pediatrics, died after an 81-centimetre (32-inch) TV fell off its stand and fractured the child's skull.
     
    "It's often like a crush injury," Drake said in an interview Monday. "So it's not what we would call a high-velocity head injury like you would have in a car accident. This is relatively low-velocity, but the TVs are very heavy, so they sort of crush the skull.
     
    "So that causes these fractures and often injures the nerves at the base of the skull that control the face and the eyes and the hearing. Many recover, but some of them are left with a permanent deficit."
     
    According to the Canadian Hospitals Injury Reporting and Prevention Program (CHIRPP), Sick Kids treated 33 children who had been injured by falling TVs between 2011 and 2013. Twelve of the children were admitted, 16 had head injuries and 18 had fractures, including skull fractures.
     
    For privacy reasons, the hospital does not reveal the number of deaths, but a spokeswoman said there were "under five."
     
    "It's a totally preventable trauma," agreed Drake," and families need to be vigilant and tether their TVs so they can't possibly fall over. And children watching TV do need to be monitored."
     
    Cusimano said parents, grandparents and other caregivers can take steps to prevent this needless injury:
     
    — Avoid placing toys or remotes on top of the TV.
     
    — Create a restricted play area around the television. 
     
    — Use a proper TV stand or console; don't place it on top of a high piece of furniture.
     
    — Position the TV back from the edge of where it's placed.
     
    — Attach the TV to the wall to prevent it from falling.

    MORE Life ARTICLES

    Understanding the sleep patterns of your child

    Understanding the sleep patterns of your child
    If your infant is not sleeping through the night, it may not be a reason to panic as sleep patterns of infants vary for at least the first three years of life, says a new study....

    Understanding the sleep patterns of your child

    Virtual body swapping could abolish race biases

    Virtual body swapping could abolish race biases
    With the help of a technique called virtual body swapping, researches have helped people change their attitudes with regard to others....

    Virtual body swapping could abolish race biases

    26/11 Mastermind Lakhvi Gets Bail, Shocked India Asks Pakistan To Act

    26/11 Mastermind Lakhvi Gets Bail, Shocked India Asks Pakistan To Act
    An anti-terrorism court in Islamabad Thursday granted bail to Zakiur Rehman Lakhvi, a key mastermind of the 26/11 Mumbai attacks, triggering shock and indignation in India which asked Pakistan to take steps to reverse the decision.

    26/11 Mastermind Lakhvi Gets Bail, Shocked India Asks Pakistan To Act

    'Most US Children Likely To Live With Unmarried Mothers'

    'Most US Children Likely To Live With Unmarried Mothers'
    More than half of all US children will likely live with unmarried mothers at some point before they reach 18, said a study by researchers from the Princeton University and the Harvard University, the US.

    'Most US Children Likely To Live With Unmarried Mothers'

    Spicy foods boost men's sex drive

    Spicy foods boost men's sex drive
    A French study has found that men who love to consume more spicy food have more testosterone and perform better during sex....

    Spicy foods boost men's sex drive

    How to rekindle romance in army couples

    How to rekindle romance in army couples
    For army families who live in combat zones, giving each other time and space is the first step towards rekindling romance when the spouse returns home...

    How to rekindle romance in army couples