FindLaw Class Action and Mass Tort Center: Recalls: CPSC: Posion Prevention Week
NEWS from CPSC
U.S. Consumer Product Safety Commission
| Office of Information and Public Affairs |
Washington, DC 20207 |
| FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE |
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| March 12, 1980 |
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| Release # 80-008 |
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Posion Prevention Week Planned To Warn Parents Of Household Poisons
WASHING'IDN, D.C. (March 12)-- As many as 100,000 young American
Children will be poisoned accidentally this year, the governments
warning parents. And most of these poisonings will occur as a direct
result of adult carelessness about household substances which are
poisonous.
The warning comes from the Consumer Product Safety Commission which
is helping to promote National Poison Prevention Week, being conducted
this year from March 16th through the 22nd.
CPSC Chairman Susan King and Commissioner Jere E. Coyan of the
Food and Drug Administration are reminding parents that nearly all
accidental poisonings to children under the age of five years can be
prevented by keeping dangerous household products out of their reach.
They are urging parents to
- buy and use products with child-resistant caps and closures.
- keep products in their original containers with the warning
labels intact.
- make sure that drugs, cleaning products and other potentially
hazardous substances are kept securely in cabinets and other
locations inaccessible to children.
Both CPSC and the FDA are members of the Poison Prevention Week
Council which sponsors the annual publicity campaign. The Council
consists of 28 professional and trade associations, health and safety
organizations, youth-oriented service groups, and medical, dental,
nursing and pharmaceutical organizations, as well as government agencies.
CPSC administers a federal law (the Poison Prevention Packaging
Act) which requires child-resistant packaging for certain types of
narcotics and other dangerous drugs, drain cleaners and oven cleaners,
lighter fluid, turpentine and a variety of solvents and other household
products. *
Until the previous decade, aspirin was the substance most commonly
involved in poisonings to young children and was the first substance
required to have child-resistant closures under the PPPA. Since the
safety closures have been required, there has been a 76 per cent reduction
in the number of deaths to young children who ingested aspirin, and
a 60 per cent decrease in the actual number of ingestions. Overall,
deaths from accidental poisonings to young children from all household
products have been reduced by 56 per cent.
Most recently, poisonous household plants have been the cause
of the greatest number of reports of child poisonings (as reported
by poison control centers across the country). Detergents, cleaners
and soaps ranked second, and vitamin/mineral preparations ranked third.
Parents only do not perceive some household liquids to be
poisonous - such as furniture polish, liniments and paint thinner -
resulting in careless storage of the containers. Special care should
be taken to store these products out of the reach of young children
and to purchase them only if they are equipped with child-resistant
closures.
CPSC is reminding parents and other consumers that child-resistant
packaging can help save lives only if properly used.
Additional safety tips include
- closing the container properly after use to rescure
the safety feature.
- remembering that these safety features are no more
than "child-resistant" - some young children may be
able to open poison-prevention packages.
- ensuring that the telephone numbers of the nearest
poison control center, rescue squad service and physician
are listed next to the telephone in the event of a
poisoning.
* Other products covered by the PPPA of 1970 include automobile
antifreeze, oral dosage prescription drugs, dietary supplements
and drugs containing iron, windshield washer solutions, liquid
furniture polish, oil of wintergreen, products containing aspirin
and aspirin substitutes.
The U.S. Consumer Product Safety Commission protects
the public from unreasonable risk of injury
or death from 15,000 types of consumer products under the agency's jurisdiction. To
report a dangerous product
or a product-related injury and for information on CPSC's fax-on-demand service, call
CPSC's hotline at (800)
638-2772 or CPSC's teletypewriter at (800) 638-8270. To order a press release through
fax-on-demand, call
(301) 504-0051 from the handset of your fax machine and enter the release number.
Consumers can obtain this
release and recall information or report product hazards to
info@cpsc.gov.
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