Slashdot Mirror


Rare Earth Magnets Pose Threat To Children

Hugh Pickens writes writes "Many of today's toys contain rare-earth magnets which are much more powerful than the magnets of yesteryear and the magnets pose a serious threat to children when more than one is ingested because as the magnets attract one another they can cause a range of serious injuries, including holes through internal organs, blood poisoning and death (PDF). Braden Eberle, 4, swallowed two tiny magnets from his older brother's construction kit on two successive days last spring and his mother's first reaction was that the magnet would pass through her son's system without a problem. "People swallow pennies of the same size every day," said Jill Eberle. "They're smaller than an eraser." But next morning, with Braden still in pain, the family's doctor told them to go straight to the emergency room where an X-ray revealed two magnets were stuck together. "They were attracted to each other with the wall of each segment they were in stuck together," said Dr. Sanjeev Dutta, the pediatric surgeon at Good Samaritan Hospital who would operate on Braden later that day. "Because they were so powerful, the wall of the intestine was getting squeezed, squeezed, squeezed, and then it just necrosed, or kind of rotted away, and created a hole between the two." The US Consumer Product Safety Commission (CPSC) says at least 33 children have been injured from ingesting magnets (PDF) with a 20 month-old dying, and at least 19 other children requiring surgery."

5 of 284 comments (clear)

  1. Re:Parents by Haedrian · · Score: 4, Informative

    You can't keep your eye on your kids all the time. Especially if they're in a 'safe' area playing with age appropriate toys.

  2. Re:Why are you surprised? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Informative

    Did you take the plastic bags away at the same time?

    All of my "rare-earth" magnets came with giant warnings that not only say "KEEP AWAY FROM ALL CHILDREN" but also "Keep away from nose and mouth. Do not swallow. If swallowed, seek emergency medical attention as magnets may stick together in the intestine, causing severe injury or death".

    How could that be more clear?

  3. Re:Level of risk by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Informative

    Top five causes of injury death (source World Report on Child Injury Prevention 2008)
    Road crashes: 260,000 children a year
    Drowning: 175,000 children a year
    Burns: 96,000 children a year
    Falls: 47,000 children a year
    Poisoning: 45,000 children each year

    Yup worrying about rare earth magnets is pretty useless.

  4. Re:In toys? by TheLink · · Score: 5, Informative

    I believe chilli or chilli oil when used judiciously can teach children not to put just anything into their mouths, and to obey their parents when told to not put stuff in their mouths.

    The "effective dose" of chilli is quite low compared to the toxic/harmful dose, so it's quite safe for such things. The kid might cry a lot, but after that they'll be more likely to believe dad or mom when they say "No!".

    --
  5. Re:In other News by ATMAvatar · · Score: 2, Informative

    I believe the point was that a parent of a child who swallows a rare-earth magnet is an idiot. Killing off the offspring of a lesser-fit being because they fail at parenting is just as much natural selection as killing off the lesser-fit being before they procreate in the first place.

    --
    "They that can give up essential liberty to obtain a little temporary safety deserve neither liberty nor safety."