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Playing
in Sand Can Be Dangerous to Kids
Although it rarely happens, children can be killed while playing
in sand. "Sand dunes, beach digging, and other areas of substantial
sand buildup, including deep backyard sandboxes, represent the
greatest risk," researchers warn.
The cases of two children illustrate
the potential hazard. In one instance, a 10-year-old boy was killed
when the tunnel he was digging in his large backyard sandbox collapsed
and buried him. In the other, another 10-year-old died after a
sand pile buried him at the construction site where he and his
friends were playing.
Both boys died of suffocation due
to the pressure of the sand on their chests.
Dr. Abdalla E. Zarroug of the Mayo
Clinic College of Medicine in Rochester, Minnesota, and colleagues
describe the incidents in the journal Mayo Clinic Proceedings.
Although such accidents appear
few and far between -- only 15 have been reported in the medical
literature -- parents should be aware of the potential danger,
according to the researchers.
They note that, depending on the
age and strength of the child, being buried in even one foot of
sand could overwhelm a child's ability to breathe.
In an accompanying editorial, Dr.
Jay L. Grosfeld advises that children should only be allowed to
play in sand dunes, dig tunnels at the beach, or build large sand
castles when an adult is supervising.
The fact that one child in the
current report died in his backyard sandbox suggests that there
needs to be a limit on the depth of home sandboxes, according
to Grosfeld, who is surgeon-in-chief at Riley Children's Hospital
in Indianapolis.
In that case, the boy was buried
for 10 minutes before he was pulled out; in the other incident,
at the construction site, rescue workers searched for an hour
before finding the boy trapped under 12 feet of sand.
"An important message," Grosfeld
writes, "is that young children need to be supervised. If either
of the two reported events had been observed, the chance of prompt
extrication and survival would have been better."
SOURCE: Mayo Clinic Proceedings,
June 2004.
Reference
Source 89
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