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Study Downplays Kids' Backpack Injuries
CHICAGO -
Children are more likely to be hurt tripping over backpacks or
being hit with them than they are using the bags to lug around
heavy school supplies, a new study suggests.
While there has been growing concern
about back trouble in children who carry loaded-down packs, researchers
found the back was one of the least likely places where children
were injured.
When kids did get hurt, about 23
percent of all injuries in the 247 children studied were caused
by wearing, lifting or taking off a backpack, according to the
study by researchers from the Cincinnati Children's Hospital.
"This result shows that the actual
use of a backpack is not exceptionally dangerous, and efforts
should be directed toward educating children on proper backpack
safety habits rather than restricting loads and redesigning backpacks,"
concludes the study published in the January issue of the journal
Pediatrics.
How much children carry to school
and how they carry it has been the focus of some attention. California
last year passed a law for standards on maximum textbook weights
and some children around the country now use backpacks with wheels
to roll instead of carry their books to school.
The study looked at backpack-related
injuries resulting in emergency room visits that were reported
to the U.S. Consumer Product Safety Commission in 1999 and 2000.
The study acknowledges a limitation:
By focusing on injuries that sent children to emergency departments,
it misses those injuries diagnosed and treated in a physician's
office.
For those years, the agency's data
projected a national estimate of more than 12,000 injuries linked
to bookbags or back carriers, excluding infant-carriers and camping
backpacks.
In this study, researchers focused
on a sample of 247 children between the ages of 6 and 18 with
backpack injuries.
Tripping over a backpack accounted
for 28 percent of the injuries, while wearing one or being hit
with one each accounted for about 13 percent.
Properly stowing away backpacks
at home and at school could have prevented many of these injuries,
said researcher Dr. Eric Wall, a pediatric orthopedic surgeon.
"The floor is no place for a backpack,"
Wall said.
Backpack-related injuries that
landed children in the emergency room ranged from cuts on the
face and head to jammed fingers and fractures to shoulder strains
and ankle sprains.
The combination of wearing a backpack
and sustaining an injury to the back accounted for 6 percent of
the injuries. However, 19 shoulder injuries were linked to wearing,
lifting or taking off a back pack.
That's why the American Chiropractic
Association's Jerome McAndrews said children still need to be
careful about how they carry their backpacks and how much weight
they put in them.
Reference
Source 102
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