Latest Window Blind Tragedy in the UK

31.01.2012

Aaron O’Connell

Three year-old Evie Mid­dle­ton died on last Fri­day after­noon after becom­ing entan­gled in the cords of a win­dow blind at her home.

Despite the efforts of para­medics to ressusi­tate her, she was pro­nounced dead after arriv­ing at the Pin­der­fields Hos­pi­tal in Wakefield.

Ten tod­dlers have died as a result of stran­gu­la­tion in win­dow blind cords in the United King­dom since the begin­ning of 2010 and a total of 21 since 1999. The British Blind and Shut­ter Asso­ci­a­tion have made great efforts to pro­mote win­dow blind safety with their “Make It Safe” cam­paign but the fre­quency of these deaths has been increasing.

Greater pub­lic aware­ness is needed and it is now time that gov­ern­ments get involved and high­light the prob­lem. One child’s death is one too many.

50 Seconds Can Change Your Life

30.12.2011

Aaron O’ConnellChild reaching - www.windowblindsafety.ie

29.12.2011

IT takes about fifty sec­onds to make a cup of tea or cof­fee. It also takes about fifty sec­onds to send a text to a friend. But did you know that an inno­cent child can have its poor life cut short by stran­gu­la­tion in an unsafe cord or chain oper­ated win­dow blind in fifty seconds?

The length of time I have quoted above is cor­rect. Sta­tis­tics have shown this to be true. Indeed it is also proven that that unfor­tu­nate child will have lost con­scious­ness in approx­i­mately ten sec­onds when it is hang­ing from win­dow blind cord or chain and unable to sup­port its own weight.

The Sta­tis­tics

In 1998, in a sam­ple of hos­pi­tals in the 15 Mem­ber Sates of the Euro­pean Union, 129 chil­dren were hos­pi­talised due to an injury involv­ing a win­dow blind loop or drap­ery cord. In the United King­dom, it is esti­mated that one or two chil­dren die every year after becom­ing entan­gled in the cords of a blind. More recently, the Com­mis­sion has become aware of ten fatal acci­dents involv­ing chil­dren aged between 15 and 36 months that occurred in Ire­land, Fin­land, the Nether­lands, the United King­dom, and Turkey in the period 2008 to 2010. Here in Ire­land there have been eight fatal­i­ties, four of which have occurred in the last four years.  In the United States 119 fatal­i­ties and 111 near-misses involv­ing corded win­dow cov­er­ings were reported to have occurred since 1999. In Canada, 28 fatal­i­ties and 23 near-misses have been linked to the same prod­ucts since 1986. In Aus­tralia, at least 10 chil­dren have been acci­den­tally stran­gled by blinds cords since 2000. How­ever, these fig­ures cap­ture only a part of the prob­lem, as many such acci­dents are not reported.

 Research indi­cates that most acci­den­tal deaths involv­ing blind cords hap­pen in bed­rooms and the chil­dren con­cerned are aged between 16 months and 36 months. Over half these acci­dents hap­pen to chil­dren around 23 months. Although fully mobile at that age, chil­dren find it dif­fi­cult to free them­selves if they become entan­gled in the cords, as their heads still weigh more in pro­por­tion to their bod­ies com­pared to adults, and their mus­cu­lar con­trol is not yet fully devel­oped. In addi­tion, their wind­pipes have not yet fully devel­oped and are thus smaller and less rigid than in adults and older chil­dren, so that they suf­fo­cate more quickly if their necks are constricted.

 The Solutions

Now, I’m not propos­ing that we mon­i­tor our chil­dren 24/7. That’s impos­si­ble, even with mod­ern tech­nol­ogy. It doesn’t take the newest of gad­gets to make corded win­dow blinds safe from our chil­dren.  What I am sug­gest­ing is that there are sim­ple and effec­tive solutions.

 Each type of oper­at­ing sys­tem must be treated sep­a­rately. A safety solu­tion for a chain-operated blind isn’t suit­able for the oper­at­ing sys­tem of, say, a cord oper­ated blind. I have addressed this issue in my web­sites, windowblindsafety.ie and childsafety.ie, where suit­able and effec­tive solu­tions are pre­sented for each dif­fer­ent type of win­dow blind.

 The Options

Let’s take a look at the options available:

Safety Device for Chain Operated Blind

Fig­ure 1

Chain oper­ated win­dow blinds, typ­i­cally roller, ver­ti­cal lou­ver, roman and mono-command vene­tians, should be made safe by installing a ten­sion device (See Fig­ure 1). Once installed cor­rectly this will hold the chain taut (under ten­sion) and won’t require fur­ther con­sumer participation.

A cleat used to accumulate cord

Fig­ure 2

 Win­dow blinds, which are oper­ated by pull cords, require a num­ber of solu­tions to make them safe from stran­gu­la­tion. Firstly, the tas­sel needs to be replaced with one that will break away when a child gets entan­gled in the loop. Then an accu­mu­la­tion device (for exam­ple a cleat) is required that will allow the con­sumer to tie off the cords out of reach of young chil­dren (See Fig­ure 2). This solu­tion requires con­sumer par­tic­i­pa­tion, there­fore it is vital that it is used, par­tic­u­larly when the blind is raised and the pull cord is at it’s longest.

 The inner cords of cord-operated blinds are of par­tic­u­lar dan­ger to chil­dren. Mario “MJ” Williams Jr died in Octo­ber in the US after he became entan­gled in the inner cords of a Roman blind. Please refer to “US Safety Plans Too Lax” on my web­site. The solu­tion in this case would have been to install break­away clips which would elim­i­nate the haz­ardous loop when the weight of a child is applied to the cord.

Inner Cord Stops for Venetian Blinds

Fig­ure 3

Inner cords in venet­ian blinds are also a dan­ger. The solu­tion in this instance is to install cord stops (See Fig­ure 3). One cord stop is required per cord and these will pre­vent a loop from being cre­ated in which a child can fit its head. It is imper­a­tive that these stops are posi­tioned cor­rectly, ide­ally within 150mm on the head rail. If a child pulls on the inner cord of a blind the cord stops will raise towards the head rail and will not be able to go any fur­ther. A haz­ardous loop will not be created!

The safety solu­tions that I have cov­ered above are cost effec­tive. They cost from €1.50 to €4.00 to pur­chase and not more than five min­utes to install. They can be pur­chased from Child Safety.ie.

October Kicks Off National Window Covering Safety Month

05.10.2011

Par­ents and Care­givers Reminded to be Aware of the Poten­tial Dan­gers of Win­dow Blind Cords

New York, NY., Octo­ber 3, 2011 /PRNewswire/ — In their ongo­ing effort to keep young chil­dren safe, the Win­dow Cov­er­ing Safety Coun­cil wants to remind par­ents and care­givers that Octo­ber is National Win­dow Cov­er­ing Safety Month. This cam­paign focuses on rais­ing aware­ness of the poten­tial stran­gu­la­tion haz­ards that win­dow cords can pose to young chil­dren and tod­dlers. Par­ents and care­givers are urged to use only cord­less win­dow cov­er­ings in homes with young children.

Accord­ing to infor­ma­tion pro­vided by the U.S. Con­sumer Prod­uct Safety Com­mis­sion, since 1990 more than 200 infants and young chil­dren have died from acci­den­tally stran­gling in win­dow cords. “Par­ents who replace their older win­dow cov­er­ings with the new cord­less prod­ucts can feel more con­fi­dent about their child’s safety,” explains Win­dow Cov­er­ing Safety Coun­cil (WCSC) Exec­u­tive Direc­tor, Peter Rush. Con­tinue Reading

Don’t let our child’s death be in vain’

03.10.2011

Dean Patrick Regan Russell

By SIMON BROUDER

Wednes­day Sep­tem­ber 28 2011

 THE dev­as­tated par­ents and fam­ily of a Tralee tod­dler who died after he became entan­gled in the cord of a win­dow blind want to see the type of blinds that claimed the life of their beloved child banned.

Last Fri­day an inquest was held into the tragic death of 23-month-old Dean Patrick Regan Rus­sell who died last Jan­u­ary when he became entan­gled in the cords of a roller blind in his bedroom.

His fam­ily have now joined a national cam­paign seek­ing to have these blinds banned so other fam­i­lies can be spared the grief they have suf­fered. Con­tinue Reading

Coroner Brian Farrell Calls For Ban on Roller Blind

24.09.2011

Top News, New Zealand

After cases of deaths after being entan­gled in looped cord blinds, another case of a 23-month-old boy is being heard for the same in Dublin.

It was reported that on Jan­u­ary 2, Dean Patrick Regan Rus­sell got entan­gled in the blind which trig­gered his death on 7th Jan­u­ary. Had that unfor­tu­nate inci­dent not occurred, the infant would have enjoyed his birth­day just two weeks after.

The most shock­ing part is that the prod­uct has no safety mea­sures attached with it, there by esca­lat­ing the belief that man­u­fac­tures have prob­a­bly over­looked the need for the same. Con­tinue Reading

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