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Rod Rod is offline
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Default Be careful...

Toddlers' toilet seat crush peril

An increasing number of small boys may be finding toilet training a more
painful experience than they anticipated, say safety experts.

Doctors at one English hospital reported four cases in which a toddler's
penis had been injured by a falling toilet seat.

The fashion for heavy wooden and ceramic seats is worsening the problem,
they say.

Figures suggest there may be up to 250 similar cases a year in the UK.

Dr Joe Philip, from Leighton Hospital in Crewe, said that parents might
need to take more precautions to keep their young sons out of A&E.

He called for more seats to be designed to fall slowly, and for heavier
seats to be banned from households with young boys.

He even suggested that the social norm of putting the seat down after
use be suspended and the seat fixed in an upright position.

He said: "As Christmas approaches many families will be visiting
relatives and friends and their recently toilet-trained toddlers will be
keen to show how grown up they are by going to the toilet on their own.

"It is important that parents check out the toilet seats in advance, not
to mention those in their own homes, and they should accompany their
children if necessary."

The four boys visiting the Crewe hospital, aged between two and four,
all needed to stay in hospital overnight, although fortunately no
lasting damage was done.

They had all lifted the toilet seats themselves, which had then fallen
back down onto their penises, the journal BJU International reported.

Increasing risk

Dr Philip said: "A recent market research report has suggested that
there has been a worldwide increase in the number of wooden and ceramic
toilet seats sold.

"We would not be surprised to hear that other colleagues have noticed an
increase in penis crush injuries as a result of this."

He said that parents should consider training their youngsters to hold
up the toilet seat with one hand.

A spokeswoman for RoSPA confirmed that the cases at Crewe were not
isolated examples.

Sheila Merrill, home safety manager for England, said: "The most recent
figures show there are an estimated 250 visits to A&E each year by boys
under the age of five involved in similar accidents.

"So perhaps it's advisable that parents with toddlers think twice about
having heavy toilet seats while their children are young.

"However, as with children of all ages, in all areas of the home,
supervision is always the most crucial aspect in preventing accidents."

http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/health/7779024.stm

Reminds me of the toilets at school - they mostly had bits of wood
attached directly to the bowl, and more often than not, whether of that
type of the more common plastic lifting type, had a gap at the front.

--
Rod

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