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Consumer Reports: Magnets marketed as toys could be dangerous to kids

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Posted at 4:00 AM, Mar 11, 2020
and last updated 2020-03-11 09:14:04-04

TUCSON, Ariz. - Back in 2012, 22-month old Braylon Jordan was just one of thousands of children who ended up in the emergency room after swallowing tiny magnets like these. Their powerful force perforated his intestine, most of which had to be surgically removed. These are not just any magnets! Rare-earth magnets can be 30 times stronger than ordinary refrigerator magnets. They have an exceptionally strong magnetic field for their size and can be difficult to separate.

“These really strong magnets, if they’re swallowed, can pinch together breaking through the intestinal tract lining causing serious trauma," says Consumer Reports Chief Scientific Officer, James Dickerson Ph.D.

The type of magnets that caused Braylon’s injuries were banned in 2014, but in 2016, a panel of Federal judges voted 2-1 to rescind the ban and magnets started appearing on store shelves again. Back In 2016, when the ban on rare-earth magnets was first lifted, the number of ingestions reported was 281 but then rose to an estimated 1666 in 2019.

“Now that the ban has been lifted, and these products are much more readily available, parents, please be vigilant about protecting your kids from the dangers and hazards of these products, "says Dickerson. "Educate them about the hazards, and certainly if you have young kids, avoid having them in your house.”

The Toy Association lobby points out that these rare-earth magnets are designed and sold as adult stress-relievers or executive desk products and are not intended to be used as children’s toys. But as the emergency rooms data shows, children are still coming in contact with these products.

Consumer Reports strongly urges parents to use extreme caution and recommends that you avoid having these magnet sets if there are any children in your home.