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FIREWORKS ALERT:LEAVE DISPLAY FIREWORKS TO THE PROFESSIONALS!During this Fourth of July holiday, the sobering facts of fireworks eye-related and bodily injuries in our state should make people think twice before handling the devices, Please leave the display fireworks to the professionals this holiday season. According to the 2001 ISPB Illinois Annual Fireworks Survey -- compiled from data received from the Illinois hospital emergency rooms, ophthalmologists and optometrists -- 83 percent of the eye-related injuries were children and young adults under the age of twenty, nearly a 54 percent increase from the 2000 survey results. Sixty-five percent of those treated were males; and bottle rockets led the list in causing the most eye-related injuries. Bottle rockets, illegal in Illinois, have also been identified as a major source of preventable vision loss by one of ISPB's programs, the Illinois Eye Injury Registry (IEIR) and by the other state affiliates of the United States Eye Injury Registry (USEIR).** Sparklers, legal in Illinois, can also cause injury and damage. They burn at 1800° and are lighted with a match. Please Be Careful! The ISPB continues to assist and support the Illinois public safety agencies, police and fire departments in helping to educate more adults and children through videos, brochures, posters and billboards and to monitor possible transporting of illegal fireworks from neighboring states into Illinois. Illegal fireworks in the mainstream could present substantial risks of injury resulting in vision loss, blindness, amputations, burns and even death. Because of risks for injury and the importance of fireworks safety, here are some suggestions to follow:
James A. McKechnie, Jr., Executive Director of the Illinois Society for the Prevention of Blindness reminds us that fireworks in Illinois, with the exception of sparklers, are illegal. Mr. McKecknie recommends that
Through widespread media publicity and by educating children and adults of the dangers of fireworks, the ISPB hopes that the number of eye-related and bodily injuries will be reduced, not only during this Fourth of July holiday and New Year’s Eve, but throughout the year.
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© Copyright 2001 - 2007 Illinois Society for the Prevention of Blindness |
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