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I've had some information from the American Academy of Pediatric meeting in Chicago which I have been saving until spring to pass on.

There was a very detailed and graphic discussion of power mower injuries and their effects.

Power mower injuries affected 38,000 people in 1980

Physicians have a special term for this type of injury which sets it apart from the average accidental injury, and that is: high velocity.

In such type of injuries, more than just the immediate skin is lacerated or abraded.  The velocity imparts destructive damage to the surrounding tissue, which then devitalizes it -- or in other words, breaks down its structure and cuts off its own blood supply.

The wound then, at least, has a much more difficult time healing and, at worst, must be widely amputated.

Children are particularly susceptible to power mower injuries, mainly due to lack of proper safety precautions.

Examples include a two-year old girl who was pulled into the blades when her dress caught in its blades; a four-year old girl who fell in front of a riding mower while wrestling with a sibling; an eighteen-month old boy riding a mower with his father who fell off and died of massive head injuries; a child sitting on a porch who was killed by a bolt thrown from a power mower.

The consumer products safety commission (CPSC) has compiled a report which includes some frightening figures:

  1. -- Riding mowers account for approximately 150 deaths annually.
  2. -- Children younger than 15 are victims in 23 percent of the deaths.
  3. -- Fourteen percent of all power mowing injuries occur in children younger than 15.
  4. -- Risk of death in children younger than five years is estimated to be 11 times that of the mower operator.

The average length of hospitalization was 22 days, not counting the repeat hospitalizations for follow up surgery on mutilated limbs and tissue.

These unfortunate children not only suffer physical problems but emotional and social problems related to these types of injuries.

Other types of injuries include being run over by a riding mower; rocks, grass, or other objects being flung by the mower striking the child; burns from gasoline that has ignited while the tank is filled; and burns from touching hot metal blades or other hot mower parts.

A public information pamphlet prepared by the American Academy of Pediatrics includes the following five guidelines for parents who use power lawn mowers:

Now, be sure and check the index (menu bars above) for: other related articles on this topic: or, recently answered questions, which are sometimes more specific.

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