| |
|||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| Spring - Summer 2003 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
“Better To Be Safe Than Sorry” This July 4th HolidayT he Fourth of July holiday season is just two months away, but it is not too early to remind you that it is “better to be safe than sorry” when being around fireworks of any kind.Let’s face it! No one is safe. Every year in Illinois, babies, boys and girls, teens, and men and women in their 20’s, 30’s, 40’s, 50’s, 50’s, 70’s and 80’s are burned or hurt by fireworks. Fireworks not only damage eyes but hands, fingers, faces, ears and bodies. They burn, cut and puncture. They can maim and kill. Why take a chance! Play it safe and have a fun-filled and eye-safe holiday.
Hospital emergency rooms, ophthalmologists and optometrists statewide were contacted to assist us in gathering data for the 2002 ISPB Illinois Fireworks Annual Survey. The results revealed that 50 percent of the fireworks eye injuries were to children and young adults through the age of twenty (down from 84 percent in 2001). The age breakdown (percentage) was:
Other survey results (in averaged percentages)showed that 67 percent of those treated were males, while 17 percent were females with 17 percent unspecified. Bottle rockets led the list in causing the most eye-related injuries at 50 percent, followed by roman candles and dynamite, both at 17 percent with 17 percent unspecified. As reported by the respondents, all the fireworks listed caused varying degrees of eye injuries, including eye lacerations, abrasions, corneal burns, ruptured globe (eyeball) by a roman candle, requiring surgery and one 22-year old male with probable loss of sight from the effects of dynamite. IF fireworks must play a part in your holiday celebration, please heed the following practical safety tips:
Remember the ISPB’s message: Don’t Be Blinded by the Dangers of Fireworks! The Visionary , published as a service of the Illinois Society for the Prevention of Blindness,is available upon request. The information contained in this issue, taken from sources considered to be accurate, does not replace the need for professional eye care consultations and treatments.
|
|||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||