1. Q. What is National Poison Prevention Week?
A.
Public Law 87-319 authorizes the President to designate annually the third week in
March as National Poison Prevention Week. This act of Congress was signed into law on
September 16, 1961, by President Kennedy, after which the Poison Prevention Week Council
was organized to coordinate this annual event. Congress intended this event as a means for
local communities to raise awareness of the dangers of unintentional poisonings and to
take such preventive measures as the dangers warrant.
2. Q. Is there a special theme for National Poison Prevention Week?
A. Yes, our basic theme is "Children Act Fast...So Do Poisons!" This means that
parents must always be watchful when household chemicals or drugs are being used. Many
incidents happen when adults are using a product but are distracted (for example, by the
telephone or the doorbell) for a few moments. Children act fast, and adults must make sure
that household chemicals and medicines are stored away from children at all times.
3. Q. If my child eats or drinks a substance that might be a poison, where can I find
information on treatment?
A. If you think someone has been poisoned from a medicine or household chemical, call
1-800-222-1222 for your Poison Control Center. This new national toll-free number
works from anyplace in the United States 24-hours-a-day, 7-days-a-week. Keep the number on your phone.
It will connect you to a Poison Control Center. There are currently 64
Regional Poison Control Centers in the United States that maintain
information for the doctor or the public on recommended treatments for the ingestion of
household products and medicines. These centers are familiar with the toxicity (how poisonous) of most substances found in the home or know how to find this information.
4. Q. If I find my youngster playing with a bottle of medicine or some household
product, how can I tell if he or she has swallowed some and what should I do?
A. Reactions vary, depending on the product. Sometimes the child may vomit or appear to be drowsy or sluggish. Some of the substance may remain around the child's
mouth and teeth. There may be burns around the lips or mouth from corrosive items.
Or, you
may be able to smell the product on the child's breath. Some products cause no immediate
symptoms. If a household chemical has been ingested, call the Poison Control Center
at 1-800-222-1222. Even if you don't know for sure that your child
has ingested a potentially hazardous product, call your Poison
Control Center right away. Keep the telephone number on your
phone.
5. Q. Are there some first aid measures I can take when an ingestion takes place?
A. Remain calm. Not all medicines and household chemicals are poisonous, and not all
exposures necessarily result in poisoning. For medicines and household chemicals call the Poison Control Center
immediately at 1-800-222-1222. If you cannot reach it, call your local
emergency number (911 in most areas) or the operator. Keep emergency numbers listed near
the phone before an emergency arises. When you contact the Poison Control Center or other
emergency personnel, be prepared to give the facts (described below) to the expert on the
other end of the phone. Have the label from the ingested product ready when you call the expert. The label provides
information concerning the product's contents and advice on what immediate first aid to
perform. Tell the expert:
The victim's age.
The victim's weight.
Existing health conditions or problems.
The substance involved and how it contacted the child. For example, was it swallowed, inhaled, absorbed through skin contact, or splashed into the eyes? How long ago did the victim swallow or inhale the substance?
Any first aid which may have been given.
If the person has vomited.
Your location, and how long it will take you to get to the hospital.
If medicine has been swallowed, do not give anything by mouth until
advised by the Poison Control Center. If chemicals or household products have been
swallowed, call the Poison Control Center.
6. Q. Why do so many poisonings involve children under 5 years old?
A. Children under 5 are constantly exploring and investigating the world
around them. This is the way they learn. Unfortunately, what children
see and reach, they usually put in their mouths. As youngsters mobility, ingenuity, and capabilities increase, they
can reach medicines and household chemicals wherever stored. For instance, when children
are crawling, they can find such products as drain cleaners stored under the kitchen sink
and on the floor. As soon as they are able to stand, they can reach such products as
furniture polish on low-lying tables, as well as medications in purses on beds. When they
start to climb, they can reach medicine on countertops or open the medicine cabinet
itself. These products should be locked up where possible, out of the
child's reach - even when child-resistant packaging is used. Adults should never leave a medicine
or household chemical product unattended. Children act fast and can get hold
of and swallow a product during the short time an adult is answering the
telephone or doorbell. If you answer the phone or doorbell, take the child (or
product) with you.
7. Q. Why do we need child-resistant packaging?
A. Although labeling requirements and educational programs have had some effect in
reducing the number of childhood ingestions, significant numbers of children are still
being poisoned by ingesting household products that can be hazardous.
These include medicines
(sometimes brought into the child's home by grandparents or other visitors or accessed by
a child visiting a home), cleaning products, and solvents. Child-resistant packaging, if
used properly, provides an additional barrier to help prevent ingestions.
8. Q. As a parent, how certain can I be regarding the effectiveness of
child-resistant
packaging?
A. While child-resistant packaging provides an increased element of protection, children
are going to investigate several different ways of opening a container. If their fingers
won't work, their teeth might. It would be impossible to manufacture a package or a
closure that would prevent every single child from getting into the contents under all
possible circumstances. Therefore, the Poison Prevention Packaging Act requires that
packages be difficult for children under 5 years old to open or otherwise obtain
a toxic amount within a reasonable time. For example, U.S. Consumer Product
Safety Commission regulations require that aspirin, and other products, be
packaged in special containers that would prevent at least 80% of those children
tested from opening the container during a 10-minute test. This requirement
means that some children may still be able to open a container or otherwise
obtain a toxic amount. So, keep poisonous substances locked up, even if they are
in child-resistant packaging. Child-resistant is not child-proof.
9. Q. How can I use child-resistant packaging properly?
A. Remember these steps: (1) Read the instructions to make it easier to open the
packaging. (2) If using cap and vial packages, be sure to resecure the closure tightly. Never transfer the contents to
other containers. (3) Do not leave loose pills anywhere. (4) Keep medicines and
household products (even those with child-resistant caps) locked up and out of sight. Use locks or
child-resistant latches to secure storage areas. The pharmacist or merchant from whom the
product was purchased can teach you how to open and close the packaging, if you have
difficulty. Opening and closing becomes easier with practice. While it may take a few
additional seconds of your time, those few seconds may save the life of a child.
10. Q. What kind of products can I expect to find in child-resistant packaging?
A. Among the substances required to be in child-resistant packaging are:
aspirin and aspirin-substitutes (acetaminophen), oral dosage prescription drugs,
iron-containing drugs and dietary supplements, ibuprofen, loperamide (an
anti-diarrhea medicine), preparations containing lidocaine and dibucaine
(anesthetic medicines), mouthwash containing 3 grams or more of ethanol (alcohol),
naproxen, ketoprofen, certain types of liquid furniture polish, oil of
wintergreen, drain cleaners, oven cleaners, lighter fluids, turpentine, paint solvents,
windshield washer solutions, automobile antifreeze, fluoride-based rust removers,
minoxidil, methacrylic acid and hydrocarbons. The
U.S. Environmental Protection Agency requires that most pesticides be in child-resistant
packaging.
11. Q. There are no small children in my home. Do I have to use child-resistant
packaging?
A. In general, all adults should use child-resistant packaging because young children
may visit the adult's home. To assist people who are elderly or handicapped, the Poison
Prevention Packaging Act allows a manufacturer to offer a regulated non-prescription
product in one size or package that does not comply with the safety packaging standard and
that bears the label statement "This package for households without young
children," if that manufacturer also offers the same product in
popular-sized child-resistant
packages. Additionally, if a prescription is involved, the purchaser or prescribing
physician can request regular, non-child-resistant packaging. However, such requests
should be kept to a minimum, since they increase the danger of childhood poisonings. Poisonings
have happened when youngsters have visited homes where no children live. Little ones
have been poisoned after finding medicine containers left in purses or on bedside tables. Poisonings
have happened when older persons carried medicines into homes that have small children.
A study conducted for the U.S. Consumer Product Safety Commission by the American
Association of Poison Control Centers found that 23 percent of the oral prescription drugs that
were ingested by children under 5 belonged to someone who did not live with the child.
Overall, 17 percent of the medicines ingested belonged to a grandparent or great-grandparent.
This percentage varied from city to city. In Salt Lake City, 9 percent of the medicines ingested
belonged to a grandparent, but in Shreveport, Louisiana, 24% of the medicines ingested
belonged to a grandparent. The data suggest that grandparents - and all adults - need to
use child-resistant packaging and keep medicines properly secured, away from young
children. CPSC requires that child-resistant packaging be "adult-friendly" so
that adults can open it more easily. This will encourage adults of all ages to
keep their medicines in their original child-resistant packaging and not be
tempted to leave the tops off medicine containers.
12. Q. Is there any evidence that deaths from child poisonings have decreased since
child-resistant packaging began to be used?
A. Yes. The staff of the U.S. Consumer Product Safety Commission estimates that
child-resistant packaging for aspirin and oral prescription medicine has saved the lives
of about 900 children since the requirements went into effect in the early 1970s. CPSC
staff analyzed child fatality data for unintentional ingestions of aspirin and oral
prescription medicines. The death rate for these medicines declined even after
accounting for the overall decline in the unintentional child death rate from all causes and
changes in per capita product consumption. The CPSC staff study showed that
child-resistant packaging for aspirin and oral prescription drugs reduced the child death
rate by over 2 deaths per million children under age 5. This represents a fatality rate
reduction of up to 45 percent from levels that would have been projected in the absence of
child-resistant packaging requirements. The estimate of about 900 lives saved relates to
aspirin and oral prescription medicines only and does not include additional lives that
may have been saved by child-resistant packaging of other products.
There has been a reduction in deaths with all medicines and household chemicals since 1972 (when
child-resistance packaging was first required).
Poisoning deaths of Children under Age 5
| Year | # Deaths |
|---|---|
|
1972 |
216 |
|
1973 |
149 |
|
1974 |
135 |
|
1975 |
114 |
|
1976 |
105 |
|
1977 |
94 |
|
1978 |
81 |
| 1979 | 78 |
|
1980 |
73 |
|
1981 |
55 |
|
1982 |
67 |
|
1983 |
55 |
|
1984 |
64 |
|
1985 |
56 |
|
1986 |
59 |
|
1987 |
31 |
|
1988 |
42 |
|
1989 |
55 |
|
1990 |
49 |
|
1991 |
62 |
|
1992 |
42 |
|
1993 |
50 |
|
1994 |
34 |
|
1995 |
29 |
|
1996 |
46 |
|
1997 |
22 |
|
1998 |
26 |
|
1999 |
29 |
|
2000 |
28 |
|
2001 |
31 |
|
2002 |
42 |
However, the number of ingestions or exposures to household medicines and chemicals
continues to be high. The American Association of Poison Control Centers reports that in
2002 there were 1,227,381 children age 5 and under exposed to potentially poisonous
substances.
13. Q. Why is it dangerous to use cups or soft-drink bottles to hold paint thinner,
turpentine, gasoline, or other household chemicals?
A. Children associate cups, soft-drink bottles, and drinking glasses with food and drink.
For example, fatalities have been reported when lighter fluid intended for outdoor
barbecue fires was poured into these containers and subsequently swallowed by children.
14. Q. Are there any good housekeeping rules I can use to prevent poisonings?
A. (1) Use child-resistant packaging properly by closing the container securely after use.
(2) Keep all chemicals and medicines locked up and out of sight.
(3) Call the Poison Control Center at 1-800-222-1222 immediately in case of
poisoning. (4) When products are in use, never let young children out of your sight, even
if you must take them along when answering the phone or doorbell.
(5) Keep items in original containers.
(6) Leave the original labels on all products, and read the label before using.
(7) Do not put decorative lamps and candles that contain lamp oil where children can reach
them because lamp oil is very toxic.
(8) Always leave the light on when giving or taking medicine. Check the dosage every time.
(9) Avoid taking medicine in front of children. Refer to medicine as "medicine,"
not "candy."
(10) Clean out the medicine cabinet periodically, and safely dispose of unneeded medicines
when the illness for which they were prescribed is over. Pour contents down drain or
toilet, and rinse container before discarding
15. Q. Are poinsettias still considered to be extremely toxic?
A. The poinsettia was blamed for a death in 1919. However, recent studies indicate that
the plant is not as highly toxic as was thought at that time. It is unlikely that
ingestion of a poinsettia would be fatal, although it may cause some gastric irritation
and burning in the mouth. Some other plants are toxic. If any indoor or outdoor
plants are ingested, Poison Control Center should be contacted or medical advice should be sought.
16. Q. Is lead in paint a serious problem if a child should ingest it?
A. In the past, paints could - and did - contain much higher levels of lead than they do
now. Since 1971, however, the permissible amount of lead in consumer paint products has
been reduced through a series of federal laws and regulations. This reduction also applies
to paints or coatings on toys or articles intended for use by children. Children can
still become poisoned by lead from ingesting chips or breathing dust from old,
heavily-leaded paint still present on walls and other surfaces in older houses and
buildings. Workers and entire families face the same hazard when older homes and buildings
are rehabilitated, and sanding raises dust as leaded paint is removed from walls, floors,
and ceilings. Pediatricians and local health departments can test children
for lead poisoning.
17. Q. Can miniature "button" batteries present a risk of childhood
poisoning?
A. These tiny batteries (used in watches, calculators, cameras, and hearing aids) usually
pass through the person without any problem. However, miniature batteries may cause
poisoning if swallowed and they can cause internal burns if they become lodged in the
esophagus or intestinal tract. If a miniature battery is swallowed, you should contact
your Poison Control Center, your physician, or the National Button Battery Ingestion
hotline at 202-625-3333 (collect calls accepted). In order to prevent ingestion of miniature batteries, consumers
should keep the batteries out of children's reach and throw away old batteries, securely
wrapped, after they have been removed from the appliance.
18. Q. Are adults also at risk when they swallow medicines and household chemicals?
A. Yes, poisonings happen to adults - especially older people - who cannot read labels or
who fail to follow instructions. Some people may confuse one medicine for another,
especially if the light is not on when they reach for a medicine at night. Others may take
too much of a medicine or may mix medicine with alcohol or other substances. Adults should
take precautions to avoid poisonings by doing the following:
(1) Turn on a light at night and put on your glasses to read the label when you need to
take a medicine.
(2) Always read the label and follow instructions when taking medicines. If any questions
arise, consult your physician.
(3) Never mix medicines and alcohol, and never take more than the prescribed amount of
medicine.
(4) Never "borrow" a friend's medicine or take old medicines.
(5) Tell your doctor what other medicines you are taking so you can avoid adverse drug
interactions.
19. Q. What can consumers do to protect themselves and their families from medicines
that have been tampered with?
A. Although most medicines are packaged in tamper-evident packaging, they are not
tamper-proof. Each consumer must be alert for the packaging to be protective. Here's how
you can help protect yourself and your family:
(1) Read the label. Over-the-counter medicines tell you on the
label what tamper-evident features you should look for on the package.
(2) Inspect the outer packaging. Look before you buy!
(3) Inspect the product itself when you open the package. Look again before you
take it! If it looks suspicious, be suspicious.
(4) Look for tablets or capsules that are different in any way from others in the
package.
(5) Don't use any medicine from a package that shows cuts, slices, tears, or other
imperfections.
(6) Never take medicine in the dark.
(7) Read the label and look at the medicine every time you take a dose.
(8) Whenever you suspect something wrong with a medicine or its packaging, take it to the
store manager.
(9) Tamper-evident packaging can help protect you if you are alert!
20. Q. What can consumers do to protect children from pesticide-related poisonings?
A. A recent survey by the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency regarding pesticide use in
and around the home revealed that almost half (47percent) of all households with children under
the age of 5 had at least one pesticide stored in an unlocked cabinet, that was less than 4
feet off the ground (i.e., within reach of children). The survey also found that 75
percent of
households without children under the age of 5 also stored one pesticide within reach of
children. This number is especially significant because 13 percent of all pesticide poisonings
occur in homes other than the child's home. Adults should take the following steps to
safeguard children from exposures to pesticides:
(1) Always store pesticides away from children's reach, in a locked cabinet or garden
shed.
(2) Read the label first and follow the directions to the letter, including all
precautions and restrictions.
(3) Before applying pesticides (indoors and outdoors), remove children and their toys from
the area and keep them away.
(4) Never leave pesticides unattended when you are using them - not even for a few
minutes.
(5) Never transfer pesticides to other containers - children may associate certain
containers with food or drink.
(6) Use child-resistant packaging properly by closing the container tightly after use.
(7) Alert others to the potential hazard, especially grandparents and caregivers.
21. Q. Where can I get more information on preventing poisonings?
A. See the "List of Materials - 2006" for available resources and
their sources of supply. The list can be obtained from Secretary, Poison
Prevention Week Council, PO Box 1543, Washington, DC 20013 and is posted at
www.poisonprevention.org.
The U.S. Consumer Product Safety Commission protects the public from the
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,
call CPSC's hotline at (800) 638-2772 or CPSC's
teletypewriter for the hearing and speech impaired at (800) 638-8270. Consumers can obtain
recall information from CPSC's web site at
http://www.cpsc.gov. Consumers can report product hazards to
info@cpsc.gov .