Look around your house. Chances are you've got toys and other household items powered by those tiny button-size batteries.
The Consumer Product Safety Commission estimates there were more than 54-thousand ER visits and at least 25 deaths attributed to button batteries from 2011 to 2021. How do children get ahold of these ...
Button batteries — they’re small devices found in almost every home, and awareness about the dangers they raise to children may be even smaller. The tiny, dime-like pucks cause injuries ...
An orthopedic spine surgeon said that he would never let his children play on a home trampoline. According to the American ...
The frightened first grader accidentally swallowed a quarter-sized button battery. It was for a watch Leighton’s grandmother gave her for her birthday in September. Leighton was born with an ...
Apple has added a new child safety warning symbol inside the battery compartment and on the packaging of AirTags.
Apple added a warning label to its AirTag tracking devices on the dangers of children swallowing them, following a violation ...
Apple's AirTag is now in compliance with US's Reese's Law, according to the government's consumer product safety watchdog.
The button cells installed in the trackers can be put in the mouth by children and thus get into the throat or stomach. After ...
My things is, I just want other parents to know about this,” Diaz said. Button batteries are also commonly found in light-up Christmas toys and greeting cards. Doctors say more than 3,000 ...