Baby walkers pose significant injury risk with no benefits research finds
COLUMBUS, Ohio (WCMH) — Researchers at Nationwide Children’s Hospital have found that baby walkers pose significant injury risk to infants and are in no way beneficial.
According to a study from Nationwide Children’s Hospital, more than 230,000 children younger than 15 months old were treated in hospital emergency departments in the US for infant walker-related injuries from 1990 through 2014.
The number of infant walker-related injuries decreased dramatically during the study period, dropping from 20,650 in 1990 to 2,001 in 2014.
The overall reduction in injuries was primarily due to a decline in falls down stairs.
The decrease in stair falls was due in part to implementation of safety standards that required changes to the way infant walkers are designed. In 1997, a voluntary safety standard was adopted that required infant walkers to be wider than a standard doorway or to have a mechanism that would cause it to stop if one of more of the wheels drop over the edge of a step.
While the greatest decrease in injuries occurred during the earlier years of the study, there was an additional 23 percent drop in injuries in the 4 years after the federal mandatory safety standard went into effect in 2010 compared with the prior 4 years.
“The good news is that the number of infant walker-related injuries has continued to decrease substantially during the past 25 years,” said Gary Smith, MD, DrPH, senior author of the study and director of the Center for Injury Research and Policy at Nationwide Children’s Hospital. “However, it is important for families to understand that these products are still causing serious injuries to young children and should not be used.”
Most of the injuries, 91 percent, were to the head or neck, and about 30 percent of the injuries were concussions/closed head injuries or skull fractures.
The three leading causes of injuries were falls down stairs, falls out of the infant walker, and injuries that occurred because the infant walker gave the child access to something they wouldn’t normally be able to reach (mostly burns from hot objects).
“Infant walkers give quick mobility (up to four feet per second) to young children before they are developmentally ready. Despite the decrease in injuries over the years, there are still too many serious injuries occurring related to this product,” said Dr. Smith. “Because of this, we support the American Academy of Pediatrics’ call for a ban on the manufacture, sale, and importation of infant walkers in the US.”
The mandatory safety standard issued in 2010 also made it easier for the CPSC to stop non-complying infant walkers at entry points to the US before they entered the marketplace (all 10 infant walkers recalled between 2001 and 2010 were imported products).