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Lawn Mower “Joy” Rides Can Lead to Catastrophic Injuries

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Friday, July 19, 2013   

COLUMBUS, Ohio – Lawn mowers will be buzzing throughout Ohio this weekend, and an expert says there are important safety measures parents should consider while cutting the grass.

Dr. Junichi Tamai at Cincinnati Children's Hospital Medical Center says lawnmowers are powerful, dangerous tools that can cause serious injuries including cuts, fractures and amputations.

"Oftentimes it's either a child who was riding with a relative on a riding lawnmower who fell off, or a child who was walking or running behind someone on a riding mower,” he says. “The relative would back up without seeing the child and run over the feet."

He says children under age 15 should never be in the yard when someone else is mowing, and children or adults should never be allowed as passengers on ride-on mowers.

According to the American Academy of Pediatrics, more than 9,000 children a year are treated in emergency rooms for lawn mower injuries, most of which occur in their own backyard.

Tamai says the majority of children treated for lawnmower-related injuries are very young, between the ages of just three and five.

"When a kid is that small, you can always get hurt from just falling off,” he says. “But the part that is most concerning for us is when a child is actually on a moving, riding lawnmower or nearby because the degree of injury is almost catastrophic."

Tamai says parents need to take the necessary safety precautions when operating a lawn mower, and be aware that it's an adult's job to protect children.

"Lawnmowers are designed to cut,” he says. “And they work very well and they have to be treated as a dangerous instrument and it's not just a ride."

And when it comes to who cuts the grass, Tamai says children younger than 12 should not use a push mower, and those under 16 should not be allowed to use ride-on mowers.





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