
From glow sticks to button batteries to the stuff you use to clean your toilet the list of products that land our kids in hospital each year is frightening.
A report released by the Australian Competition and Consumer Commission has found that cleaners, detergents, bleach, toilet cleaning products, nail polish remover and glow sticks are leaving almost 2500 children admitted to hospital every year due to poisonings.
The ACCC found that the ones we have to watch the most carefully are our two-year-olds who have the highest incidence of accidental poisoning.
The study found that in the period June 2014 to May 2015 – to the NSW poisons information centre alone – 1,373 calls were for “all purpose cleaners”( the spray type you use to clean surfaces), 1,129 for bleach, over 1000 for detergent, 900 for silica gel. Hand sanitisers, laundry detergent, glow sticks, nail polish removers and petrol were also in high numbers on the list.
Fairfax Media reports most common form of chemical exposure is through ingestion.
“This is followed by ocular and dermal exposures and exposure by inhalation. Calls relate to exposures that result in a wide range of symptoms including internal symptoms, skin reactions and burns” ACCC deputy chair Delia Rickard said.
“The most serious incidents relate to carbon monoxide exposure, button batteries, caustic cleaners such as oven and BBQ cleaners, acids, pool chemicals, household bleaches and herbicides.”
