The potentially deadly allure of “pretty poison” detergent pods for young children has only worsened since I last wrote about the problem. It’s not an epidemic—just two children died in 2013 and 2014, fortunately—but rates of poisonings from laundry and dishwasher detergent packets or “pods” are steadily increasing, and so are serious injuries from those exposures.
In fact, every 45 minutes, every day, a poison control center somewhere in the U.S. receives a call about a child who has ingested or otherwise been exposed to a laundry detergent packet, according to Gary Smith, MD, director of the Center for Injury Research and Policy at Nationwide Children’s Hospital in Columbus, Ohio. In a new Pediatrics study led by Smith, laundry detergent packets emerged as the biggest contributor to hospitalizations and serious medical effects among any other kind of detergent poisoning.
“Concentrated detergent packets may be good for sales but not for children,” Smith said. “Packets often resemble candy or juice, and are the perfect size for a young child to grab and put in their mouth.” Yet the packets differ in chemical composition from non-packet detergents and are more highly concentrated—but easier to ingest quickly. “The water-soluble membrane will quickly begin to dissolve in their mouth, and/or pop when the child bites it, which shoots concentrated detergent down their throat and into their airway,” Smith said.
Photo from U.S. Consumer Product Safety Commission
Photo from U.S. Consumer Product Safety Commission
The increase does not appear to be detergent pod poisonings replacing past non-packet detergent poisonings “but rather an alarming increase due to availability of the packets for laundry and dishwashing soaps,” said Danelle Fisher, MD, chair of pediatrics at Providence Saint John’s Health Center in Santa Monica, Calif., who was not involved in the study. The colorful, candy-sized detergent pods also arouse more curiosity from children than other types of detergent do, Fisher suggested.
More than a third of all detergent poisonings in the study involved laundry detergent pods. Given the significant harm potentially caused by the detergent packets in this study, Fisher recommends households with small children forgo them altogether until the kids are older.
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