Auburn,
March 27, 2002---Every year, poison control
centers field more than a million phone calls from
near-hysterical adults whose children have been
accidentally exposed to poisonous substances – most
often poisons stored around the home.
Some 30 of these children die from this exposure.
Many poisonings occur when adults are distracted
for just a few minutes answering the phone or doorbell
or dealing with some other routine task. It takes only
a few moments for a small child to grab and swallow
something that could be poisonous.
Many of these risks, such as pesticide poisoning,
could be easily prevented merely by taking a few
steps, experts say.
"The key to pesticide safety is keeping
pesticides stored under lock and key," says Dr.
Wheeler Foshee, an Alabama Cooperative Extension
System pesticide education specialist. "Research
shows that 5-year-olds and younger children are the
most vulnerable to exposure to pesticides, so the
farther these chemicals are away from them, the
better."
As a rule, he says, pesticides should be stored
away from the house, preferably in a locked storage
shed, when possible. Home storage should be avoided at
all costs.
In addition, pesticides should never be placed in
any container other than the ones in which they were
sold.
"Putting pesticides in cups, glasses or bowls
often puts children at risk," Foshee says,
"because they see these and assume it’s
something they can eat or drink."
Even so, experts say, the risks associated with
pesticides are no excuse to discard them entirely.
Every year, many children throughout the Southeast are
needlessly exposed to another form of poisoning --
stings from wasps, fire ants and other common pests --
often because their parents refused to use any
pesticide product in and around the home.
"There is no need for people to overreact and
assume that all pesticide products are unsafe merely
because they are poisonous to pests," says Dr.
Xing Ping Hu, an Alabama Cooperative Extension System
urban entomologist. "Some of these products used
to kill pests are perfectly safe to humans and other
mammals so long as consumers follow labeling
directions."
Fortunately for consumers, pesticide use will be
even safer in the future, thanks to a new generation
of products that will be widely available within the
next decade.
"I think
we’re truly moving forward with products that are
formulated in such low dosages and concentrations that
they don’t pose a risk," says Extension
Entomologist Dr. Kathy Flanders.
Still, even though these pesticides are safer, it
is no excuse not to follow labeling instructions, she
says.
"The manufacturers put everything on that
label for a reason and not just because they love
paying lawyers," Flanders says.
"It’s on there because it reflects plain
common sense."
(Sources: Dr.
Wheeler Foshee, Extension Pesticide Education
Specialist, and Drs. Kathy
Flanders and Xing
Ping Hu, Extension Entomologists. )