
Is Your Computer Hazardous to Your Kids' Health?
Computer injuries in children are on the rise.
Computer-related injuries on the rise in children? Sure, I thought, their thumbs get sore from playing Grand Theft Auto for hours on end. But I was wrong; we’re talking real injuries here, the kinds that land kids in the emergency room. Computer-related injuries serious enough to send someone to the emergency room have increased 732 percent from 1994 to 2006, even though home computer ownership rose less than half that. The data are gleaned from a federal database of 100 emergency rooms around the country. Children under age 5 were most likely to be hurt, and the injuries were caused by tripping over cables or equipment, being hit on the head by a falling computer monitor or getting caught on equipment. Deep cuts, bumps and bruises are the most common injuries.
Monitors are the most likely culprits, causing 37 percent of all computer injuries in 2003, according to researchers at the Center for Injury Research and Policy at Nationwide Children’s Hospital in Columbus, Ohio, who reported in the July American Journal of Preventive Medicine. (That number has been dropping, thanks to the growing popularity of flat-screen LCD monitors, which are much lighter and less likely to cause harm than the hulking cathode-ray-tube monitors of computers past.)
Computer injuries are hardly epidemic; currently, about 9,300 people a year are injured by computers. But since most parents probably never think of the home computer as a potentially dangerous device, it’s worth thinking about how to reduce the risk, particularly to children younger than 10, who are the most likely to suffer a head injury. Here’s how to make home computers safer, from the Center for Injury Research and Policy and other sources:
- Put the computer against a wall and away from walkways.
- Push the computer well back on the desk, so it’s less likely to topple.
- Anchor cables and cords to the back of the desk, or use cable covers, available at consumer electronics stores.
- Keep the computer out of play areas.
- Install safety covers on unused electrical outlets.
- Anchor desks and bookcases to the wall, then attach computer components to the desk or wall. Baby-proofing tethers or cable ties work well for this.
Injuries to children from falling furniture are on the rise, according to the Consumer Product Safety Commission, so tethering heavy furniture is a good idea even without the computer.
Head injuries can be hard to spot in children, so it’s important to ask your child follow-up questions after a bop on the head. After actress Natasha Richardson died last March, I asked Marlena Wald, an epidemiologist with the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention’s Injury Center, what parents can do. Her answer: If the child says he or she doesn’t feel right, get to the doctor. I just pushed my LCD monitor to the back of the desk. I feel safer now!
Courtesy of U.S. News & World Report
Penny, while common sense about your kids computer time is good, there is 0 as in ZERO evidence (from legitimate double blind reasearch studies from reputable juried reasearch centers of EMF Radiation causing ore being related to any of the conditions you mentioned.
Sounds like youve watched Avatar a few too many times.
people such as the writer need to learn the difference between flat PANEL and flat SCREEN. there is such things as a flat screen CRT, i have 2. when the writer said flat screen LCD's helped, the flatness of the screen had nothing do with it, it's the flatness of the PANEL. you'd think someone writing an article for MSN would get details like these right... try having a flat screen 78 lb CRT fall on you and hear someone say well atleast it was a flatscreen...
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