Policy Statement-Prevention of Choking Among Children

被引:103
作者
Gardner, H. Garry
Baum, Carl R.
Dowd, M. Denise
Durbin, Dennis R.
Lichenstein, Richard
Quinlan, Kyran P.
Sege, Robert D.
Turner, Michael S.
Weiss, Jeffrey C.
机构
关键词
choking; food; toys; FOREIGN-BODY INJURY; CHILDHOOD; AIRWAY;
D O I
10.1542/peds.2009-2862
中图分类号
R72 [儿科学];
学科分类号
100202 ;
摘要
Choking is a leading cause of morbidity and mortality among children, especially those aged 3 years or younger. Food, coins, and toys are the primary causes of choking-related injury and death. Certain characteristics, including shape, size, and consistency, of certain toys and foods increase their potential to cause choking among children. Childhood choking hazards should be addressed through comprehensive and coordinated prevention activities. The US Consumer Product Safety Commission (CPSC) should increase efforts to ensure that toys that are sold in retail store bins, vending machines, or on the Internet have appropriate choking-hazard warnings; work with manufacturers to improve the effectiveness of recalls of products that pose a choking risk to children; and increase efforts to prevent the resale of these recalled products via online auction sites. Current gaps in choking-prevention standards for children's toys should be reevaluated and addressed, as appropriate, via revisions to the standards established under the Child Safety Protection Act, the Consumer Product Safety Improvement Act, or regulation by the CPSC. Prevention of food-related choking among children in the United States has been inadequately addressed at the federal level. The US Food and Drug Administration should establish a systematic, institutionalized process for examining and addressing the hazards of food-related choking. This process should include the establishment of the necessary surveillance, hazard evaluation, enforcement, and public education activities to prevent food-related choking among children. While maintaining its highly cooperative arrangements with the CPSC and the US Department of Agriculture, the Food and Drug Administration should have the authority to address choking-related risks of all food products, including meat products that fall under the jurisdiction of the US Department of Agriculture. The existing National Electronic Injury Surveillance System-All Injury Program of the CPSC should be modified to conduct more-detailed surveillance of choking on food among children. Food manufacturers should design new foods and redesign existing foods to avoid shapes, sizes, textures, and other characteristics that increase choking risk to children, to the extent possible. Pediatricians, dentists, and other infant and child health care providers should provide choking-prevention counseling to parents as an integral part of anticipatory guidance activities. Pediatrics 2010;125:601-607
引用
收藏
页码:601 / 607
页数:7
相关论文
共 31 条
  • [1] Fatal suffocation by rubber balloons in children: mechanism and prevention
    Abdel-Rahman, HA
    [J]. FORENSIC SCIENCE INTERNATIONAL, 2000, 108 (02) : 97 - 105
  • [2] *AM AC PED, 2005, PEDIATRICS, V115
  • [3] *AM AC PED, 2006, CHOK PREV 1 AID INF
  • [4] *AM AC PED COMM IN, 1994, TIPP INJ PREV PROGR
  • [5] *AM AC PED COMM IN, 1997, INJ PREV CONTR CHILD
  • [6] FOREIGN-BODY IN THE AIRWAY - REVIEW OF 200 CASES
    BLAZER, S
    NAVEH, Y
    FRIEDMAN, A
    [J]. AMERICAN JOURNAL OF DISEASES OF CHILDREN, 1980, 134 (01): : 68 - 71
  • [7] Feeding Behaviors and other motor development in healthy children (2-24 months)
    Carruth, BR
    Skinner, JD
    [J]. JOURNAL OF THE AMERICAN COLLEGE OF NUTRITION, 2002, 21 (02) : 88 - 96
  • [8] *CDCP, 2002, MMWR-MORBID MORTAL W, V51, P945
  • [9] Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), 1997, MMWR-MORBID MORTAL W, V46, P1185
  • [10] Felcher M., 2001, It's No Accident: How Corporations Sell Dangerous Baby Products