Big drop in child surgery for objects swallowed or stuck up nose

Authored by bbc.co.uk and submitted by whatatwit
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According to the UK Payments Markets Survey, cards began outstripping cash in 2012.

And that is when the researchers say a decade-spanning drop in patient cases began.

But other factors - such as child-proof packaging and safety campaigns - probably also helped reduce cases, especially of objects stuck up the nose.

Common objects lodged in children's nostrils include beads, pins, baby teeth, screws and food, the researchers say

Peanuts and peas can sometimes get inhaled and stuck in the airways.

But concern is shifting towards other potentially dangerous shiny objects, such as button batteries and magnets, which are now sometimes swallowed by children.

These can cause deadly complications within hours and need urgent medical attention, Akash Jangan and colleagues say in The Annals of the Royal College of Surgeons of England.

An open-access web version, external made available in June 2024 shows, from 2012-22:

a 29% drop in foreign-body removal procedures, from 2,405 to 1,716

195 fewer procedures to remove swallowed objects, from 708 to 513

484 fewer retrievals from the nose, from 1,565 to 1,081

10 fewer and respiratory-tract procedures, from 132 to 122

ENT surgeon Mr Ram Moorthy, who was not involved in the study but is a member of Royal College of Surgeons of England, said: "It is positive that fewer children are swallowing coins.

"This study shows how new technology can make children safer in ways we didn't intend - but there are still hazardous items to be aware of.

"As doctors, we still worry about other dangerous items, such as button batteries and magnets, that can really cause harm.

"We must continue to make sure that small items like this are not within a child's reach."

Mondai_May on March 28th, 2025 at 21:44 UTC »

Seeing the title I thought that the difference might be from children not using as many small/choking hazard kinds of toys. But the article points out that cases have been decreasing as more people use card as payment methods rather than coins which is pretty interesting. They suggest that the coins may have been a partial cause since they are a choking hazard.

According to the UK Payments Markets Survey, cards began outstripping cash in 2012.

And that is when the researchers say a decade-spanning drop in patient cases began.

But other factors - such as child-proof packaging and safety campaigns - probably also helped reduce cases, especially of objects stuck up the nose.

Common objects lodged in children's nostrils include beads, pins, baby teeth, screws and food, the researchers say

Peanuts and peas can sometimes get inhaled and stuck in the airways.

johnnyk8runner on March 28th, 2025 at 21:40 UTC »

Tough to swallow an iPad

MagAqua on March 28th, 2025 at 21:26 UTC »

Hell yeah no more toys