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U.S. bill would require labels to warn of choking



 
 
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  #1  
Old July 18th 03, 09:05 AM
JG
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Default U.S. bill would require labels to warn of choking

www.reutershealth.com, Health eLine, 7/17/03

U.S. bill would require labels to warn of choking

[Which would no doubt be about as effective as the warnings on cigarette
packs... yeehaw...]
Last Updated: 2003-07-17 15:58:01 -0400 (Reuters Health)

By Maggie Fox, Health and Science Correspondent

WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Joan Stavros Adler thought she was doing the
right thing when she sliced her son's hot-dog into coin-sized pieces.

But 4-year-old Eric choked on a slice and died in front of her.

Adler did not know that a safer way to serve hot dogs to children under
5 is to slice the entire hot dog lengthwise into quarters, and then cut
off individual bites. She spoke on Thursday in support of a bill aimed
at making food manufacturers label products with such instructions.

"There are no universal warnings of the risks presented by certain foods
such as hot dogs, grapes, peanuts, and popcorn--foods routinely given to
children, but shown to be risky for them," Adler told a news conference.

Two House of Representatives members, California Democrat Mike Honda and
New Jersey Republican Mike Ferguson, introduced a bill intended to make
the Food and Drug Administration investigate unusual food choking
incidents.

"While we have a great system in place to warn parents of choking
hazards posed by toys, the FDA's oversight of food choking hazards is
ineffective," Honda said.

According to Centers for Disease Control and Prevention statistics, one
U.S. child dies from choking on food every five days and more than
10,000 children are taken to hospital emergency rooms for food choking
injuries every year.

Bruce Silverglade, director of legal affairs for the Center for Science
in the Public Interest, a nonprofit group that campaigns on food issues,
said parents were often surprised to learn that a single kernel of
popcorn can choke a child.

"They can eat it 10 times and it's kind of like Russian roulette," he
said. "Popcorn is particularly dangerous because it can swell up in the
throat."

Adler said she even asked her pediatrician about hot dogs and was told
they posed no special risk to her son.

"I took special precautions during Eric's short life to protect him from
what I considered the dangers of life--holding his hand in a parking
lot, locking the gate of the swimming pool, reading toy labels to make
sure they were appropriate for his age," she said.

"I am an educated person but I never realized how dangerous a hot dog
could be."


  #2  
Old July 18th 03, 12:08 PM
Roger Schlafly
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Default U.S. bill would require labels to warn of choking

Adler said she even asked her pediatrician about hot dogs and was told
they posed no special risk to her son.


Is she going to sue her ped?

"I am an educated person but I never realized how dangerous a hot dog
could be."


If hot dogs and other such foods get warning labels, then we are going
to get a lot of warning labels.


  #3  
Old July 18th 03, 05:08 PM
JG
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Default U.S. bill would require labels to warn of choking

"Roger Schlafly" wrote in message
. ..

Adler said she even asked her pediatrician about hot dogs and was

told
they posed no special risk to her son.


I wonder how old her son was at the time she asked the pediatrician; if
he (the son) was four, it's quite possible the doctor was simply relying
on AAP guidelines. (See
http://www.med.umich.edu/1libr/yourchild/food.htm).

Is she going to sue her ped?


Hehe. And if the ped doesn't have a lot of $$$, maybe she could go
after the AAP.

"I am an educated person but I never realized how dangerous a hot

dog
could be."


BS, IMO. "Never realized"? More likely "never bothered to think
about." (And just *what* did she ask the pediatrician about; hot dog
nutrition? Nitrates?) The "word" about the choking danger posed by hot
dogs (and grapes, popcorn, nuts,...) has been out for a long time.
Apparently there are even reports of knife-wielding strangers
approaching toddlers and cutting up their hot dogs for them. (See
http://www.city.davis.ca.us/pcs/chil...ng-2001nov.pdf.
)

If hot dogs and other such foods get warning labels, then we are going
to get a lot of warning labels.


....At an enormous cost and inconvenience. Shoot, I sometimes have
trouble getting the stickers off plums and apples now; itty-bitty
stickers on grapes are gonna be a REAL pain in the ass.g (And to the
eyes; my vision's deteriorating.) sigh


  #4  
Old July 18th 03, 05:29 PM
Bill Fischer
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Default U.S. bill would require labels to warn of choking

Wow! It never occurred to me that the hot dog should be sliced
lengthwise when serving children. Makes sense.

The problem here, it seems to me, isn't with the hot dog.

Mom should have been working on this child about the importance of
properly chewing food before swallowing.

Or should she sue the pediatrician because he/she didn't chew the
child's food for him?

Some adults have died trying to swallow down big chunks of beefsteak.
Their families should sue the internists? I'm sure those internists
never once mentioned the importance of proper mastication.

Maybe we should all sue Oscar Meyer for selling weapons of mass
destruction?

JG wrote:
Is she going to sue her ped?



Hehe. And if the ped doesn't have a lot of $$$, maybe she could go
after the AAP.


"I am an educated person but I never realized how dangerous a hot


dog

could be."


  #5  
Old July 18th 03, 06:31 PM
Mark Probert
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Posts: n/a
Default U.S. bill would require labels to warn of choking

Bill Fischer wrote:

Wow! It never occurred to me that the hot dog should be sliced
lengthwise when serving children. Makes sense.


Now you know the long and the short of hot dog eating. I hope you can
cut the mustard,when it comes to this.




  #6  
Old July 18th 03, 08:30 PM
Myriah Lesko
external usenet poster
 
Posts: n/a
Default U.S. bill would require labels to warn of choking

Good to hear. Whether they are read or not, it can't hurt.

--
Myriah Lesko
Pharmacist
e-drugsCanada
http://www.e-drugsCanada.com

"JG" wrote in message
.. .
www.reutershealth.com, Health eLine, 7/17/03

U.S. bill would require labels to warn of choking

[Which would no doubt be about as effective as the warnings on cigarette
packs... yeehaw...]
Last Updated: 2003-07-17 15:58:01 -0400 (Reuters Health)

By Maggie Fox, Health and Science Correspondent

WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Joan Stavros Adler thought she was doing the
right thing when she sliced her son's hot-dog into coin-sized pieces.

But 4-year-old Eric choked on a slice and died in front of her.

Adler did not know that a safer way to serve hot dogs to children under
5 is to slice the entire hot dog lengthwise into quarters, and then cut
off individual bites. She spoke on Thursday in support of a bill aimed
at making food manufacturers label products with such instructions.

"There are no universal warnings of the risks presented by certain foods
such as hot dogs, grapes, peanuts, and popcorn--foods routinely given to
children, but shown to be risky for them," Adler told a news conference.

Two House of Representatives members, California Democrat Mike Honda and
New Jersey Republican Mike Ferguson, introduced a bill intended to make
the Food and Drug Administration investigate unusual food choking
incidents.

"While we have a great system in place to warn parents of choking
hazards posed by toys, the FDA's oversight of food choking hazards is
ineffective," Honda said.

According to Centers for Disease Control and Prevention statistics, one
U.S. child dies from choking on food every five days and more than
10,000 children are taken to hospital emergency rooms for food choking
injuries every year.

Bruce Silverglade, director of legal affairs for the Center for Science
in the Public Interest, a nonprofit group that campaigns on food issues,
said parents were often surprised to learn that a single kernel of
popcorn can choke a child.

"They can eat it 10 times and it's kind of like Russian roulette," he
said. "Popcorn is particularly dangerous because it can swell up in the
throat."

Adler said she even asked her pediatrician about hot dogs and was told
they posed no special risk to her son.

"I took special precautions during Eric's short life to protect him from
what I considered the dangers of life--holding his hand in a parking
lot, locking the gate of the swimming pool, reading toy labels to make
sure they were appropriate for his age," she said.

"I am an educated person but I never realized how dangerous a hot dog
could be."




 




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