Keep Kids Away From Laundry Detergent Packs

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Keep Kids Away From Laundry Detergent Packs

by Scott Hensley

Something that looks good enough to eat can sometimes turns out to be a really big mistake.

Take those small, brightly colored single-use packs of laundry detergent that are becoming popular. To a curious toddler or small child, they look like candy.

But once inside children's mouths, the tempting packs can burst, releasing a concentrated blast of irritating detergent. Already this year there have been at least 250 cases of illness from the packs reported to poison control centers across the country.

And the particulars of the illnesses are worrisome. Children vomit. More than you would expect, says Dr. Michael Beuhler, medical director of the Carolinas Poison Center in Charlotte, N.C. And the kids often get much sicker in a hurry. "Children grow excessively tired and lethargic," he tells Shots. Some then develop so much trouble breathing they need help from a ventilator.

"We don't have a good handle on exactly what's going on," he says. But the symptoms are worse than with other types of detergent that kids ingest. One hypothesis, he says, is that something in these detergent packs is acting like a strong, short-acting sedative.

Within a few hours those symptoms usually pass. The prognosis for kids is very good overall, he says, assuming they get prompt medical care. "It's really just a matter of supporting their breathing for that short period of time," he says.

There haven't been any reports of deaths, but an analysis of the data from poison control centers continues. The specific hazards posed by the detergent packs were only recognized this month.

Buehler says parents need to treat the detergent packs with respect. "They can't be left where a child can find them," he says.

For its part, Procter & Gamble, maker of Tide Pods, said Friday it would add a double-latch to the containers of pods as a safeguard. Those will show up in stores starting in July.

For what it's worth, injuries to kids from household cleaning products dropped by almost half to about 12,000 in 2006 from around 22,000 in 1990. Kids between 1 and 3 years old remain the most vulnerable, accounting for almost three-quarters of the cases.

 
I was a pretty screwball kid. I ate toothpaste (Ipana was delicious) before the fluoride days, and hand cream. But detergent? Why would anyone eat that? Even if it smells good, the first taste would tell you it was not to be eaten. Unless we're just having a lot more...... umm...... "differently abled" children now than we did 50 years ago. I spoze it's possible.
 
I used to eat Colgate, thinking it would clean me out inside too.

I used to eat it every few days, and that was probably only around 10 years ago! Used a toothbrush sized piece.

So kids, always chew your toothpaste!
 
"Something in them is acting as a strong sedative."

So...will detergent pacs become the new hip designer drug? Will neighborhood laundromats become populated with zonked-out Pod zombies?

Aside: I don't recall eating toothpaste as a tyke, but I remember enjoying the occasional Milk-Bone Dog Biscuit with our dog Tippy.

Maybe we need to start a "Weird Things You Ate As A Kid" thread, LOL!
 
I too ate toothpaste but it gave me gas.
Minty farts! Yay. No cavities in my colon ! (Hmmm, let me rethink that one...)
Also I ate dog biscuits. But only when dared by family or friends. My friend Mary ate them a lot.
Yes they were Milk-Bone. Didn't all the colored biscuits taste the same?
 
We've had similar warnings here in Ireland about detergent tablets. Dishwasher tablets are usually the highest risk because they're smaller, look more like candy and are extremely concentrated and quite caustic and irritating.

Laundry detergent here has come in tablet and liquitab (dissolvable liquid pouches) for quite a long time now and there has definitely been an issue with kids finding the packaging too attractive.

Some products contain substances like Bitrex(tm) which is a horrendously bitter taste designed to produce a gag reflex if eaten.
 

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