Healthy tips, updates, information and news feeds for patients and families of the Dartmouth Medical Center.
Sunday, April 25, 2010
Swingset Dust and Eye Injuries
Metal dust from swings may endanger eyesight of children with autism.
The New York Times (4/16, Rabin) reports, "Children with autism are often calmed by riding on a swing; some do it for hours every day. But doctors are warning of a serious hazard that can occur when wear and tear causes small metal fragments to peel from the suspension apparatus and fall into children's eyes." According to the Times, a recent article describes the case of "a 10-year-old boy [who] came to an eye clinic at Cincinnati Children's Hospital with something lodged in his right eye." After questioning the mother, the physician discovered the "child spent hours each day on a homemade swing." To protect children, experts recommend that children "wear safety glasses," and that parents "wrap the swing mechanism in a cloth to catch any metal dust."
New autism disease may not exist, research says. The AP (4/16) reports that according to research published Friday in the BMJ, autistic enterocolitis, "a bowel disease found in autistic people," may not exist. In 1998, Andrew Wakefield published a study in the journal Lancet which described a new bowel disease and "proposed a connection between autism and the vaccine for measles, mumps and rubella. The study was widely discredited." The paper "set off a health scare," and it was later retracted by Lancet. Sir Nicholas Wright of the London School of Medicine and Dentistry says, "several studies have shown a link between inflamed bowels and autism, but too little evidence exists to prove there is a new illness."
No comments:
Post a Comment