Thousands of Young Kids Accidentally Ingest Prescription Painkillers

Thousands of Young Kids Accidentally Ingest Prescription Painkillers
The Nemours Foundation

To combat a splitting headache you take a bottle of pain relievers out of the medicine cabinet just as the doorbell rings. You set the bottle down on the counter and run to the door. By the time you've signed for the package and dashed back to the bathroom, your toddler has reached into the bottle and is getting ready to gulp down a whole handful of pills. Luckily, you're in time to divert disaster.

It's a mistake that can happen to even the most careful parents — in just a second, a minute of inattention. And, just like that, a child can be accidentally poisoned by medications you keep in your home.

According to a new study by the University of Colorado School of Medicine and the Rocky Mountain Poison and Drug Center-Denver Health, parents' prescription painkillers, in particular, are a major cause of poisoning in kids.

Looking at participating poison centers' records over a span of 31/2 years, researchers found that more than 9,000 kids ingested a prescription painkiller (mostly hydrocodone and oxycodone), and with horrible results: eight deaths (every one a child under the age of 3), 43 life-threatening or debilitating illnesses, and 214 moderate but not deadly effects. And those numbers may be only part of the story, since many poison centers weren't accounted for.

The study also found that:

  • The average age of the kids taking the meds meant for adults was 2 — often a "toddler discovering the medication during exploration of their environment."
  • Nearly all of the medications were prescribed for an adult in the household.
  • Most (92%) of the medications were ingested by children at home.

As the researchers point out, just one prescription painkiller can kill a young child.

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