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Each July Fourth, thousands of people,
most often children and teens, are injured
while using consumer fireworks. Despite
the dangers of fireworks, few people
understand the associated risks. To
prevent future tragedies, a group of
21 health and safety organizations -
the Alliance to Stop Consumer Fireworks
- urged the public, at a press conference
in Washington D.C., to avoid any use
of consumer fireworks, including sparklers
at any time of the year.
"Every year nearly 10,000 people
have to go to emergency rooms because
of fireworks injuries," said James
M. Shannon, president and CEO of the
National Fire Protection Association
(NFPA), who along with the American
Academy of Pediatrics (AAP), founded
the alliance four years ago. "Consumer
fireworks hurt thousands of people and
if we continue to use them, we are simply
continuing a holiday tradition of causing
serious injuries. We cannot keep putting
these dangerous devices in the hands
of our children."
In 2004, sparklers, fountains, and
novelties accounted for 40 percent of
all emergency room fireworks injuries.
And, the damage from fireworks goes
beyond injuries. In a typical year,
during the Independence Day holiday,
fireworks cause more fires in the U.S.
than all other causes of fire combined.
Also speaking at the event were Ed
Altizer, Virginia State Fire Marshal
representing the International Fire
Marshals Association, Dr. Mary Pat McKay,
from George Washington University Medical
Center and Dr. Stephen Baker, a plastic
surgeon Georgetown University Hospital.
As a part of the group's efforts, NFPA
released a detailed report outlining
consumer fireworks' destruction across
the U.S.
Injuries: In 2004, five out of six
(85 percent) of the 9,600 fireworks
injuries reported to emergency departments
involved fireworks that federal regulations
permit consumers to use. Total injuries
were up from 9,300 in 2003. More than
two-fifths (42 percent) of the 2004
fireworks injuries in emergency rooms
were to the head, and more than half
(53 percent) were to the extremities.
About 21 percent of injuries involved
the eyes. Nearly two-thirds (62 percent)
of all injuries were burns.
As in most years, the majority of victims
of fireworks injuries in 2004 were under
age 20. The highest injury rates were
for children aged five to nine, only
slightly higher than the rates for children
aged 10 to 14 and individuals aged 15
to 19. The rates for children age four
and younger and for young adults aged
20 to 24 were 50 percent higher than
the average rate for all ages. Males
accounted for three-fourths (75 percent)
of all reported fireworks injuries.
Fires: In 2003, the latest year for
which national fireworks-related fire
statistics are available, fire departments
responded to an estimated 2,300 structure,
and vehicle fires started by fireworks.
Each year, most fireworks-related fires
begin in outdoor brush or refuse, but
most of the loss occurs in fires with
structures involved. These fires can
start with outdoor use of fireworks,
as when a bottle rocket, launched outside,
lands on a roof or other location not
easily accessed, where it ignites combustibles
before anyone can retrieve it.
Fires started by fireworks caused $58
million in property damage to structures
and vehicles in 2003.
Laws: There are currently only five
states that ban all consumer fireworks.
They are:
Delaware
Massachusetts
New Jersey
New York
Rhode Island.
Because of the dangers of fireworks,
members of the Alliance are urging Americans
to attend professional fireworks displays
this July Fourth season. The Alliance
includes NFPA, and the AAP, along with
the American Academy of Family Physicians,
American Academy of Ophthalmology, American
Association for Hand Surgery, American
Association of Public Health Physicians,
American Burn Association, American
College of Emergency Physicians, American
Society of Plastic Surgeons, Emergency
Nurses Association, Fire Department
Safety Officers Association, International
Association of Arson Investigators,
International Association of Fire Chiefs,
International Association of Fire Fighters,
International Fire Marshals Association,
Metropolitan Fire Chiefs, National Association
of Pediatric Nurse Practitioners, National
Association of School Nurses, National
Association of State Fire Marshals,
National Volunteer Fire Council, Prevent
Blindness America.
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