A new law requires more secure battery compartments, but gaps remain. Here’s how to keep your family safe.Button cell, or ...
A recent Consumer Reports evaluation of 31 toys and household items uncovered an alarming safety risk for children from ...
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, even deaths, ...
Button and coin cell batteries can cause serious injuries if ingested or inserted into the nose or ear, and parents are ...
In a viral video with over 66 million views, medical pros shared the one thing they’d never let their kids do—and their ...
Many toys that will be opened by little ones during the holidays will need batteries to operate. But those batteries pose a ...
The Oklahoma Poison Center released a statement on Monday urging parents to secure button batteries before the holidays. Here ...
Doctors have an important warning for parents of young children before you open up the presents underneath the Christmas tree ...
Most battery ingestion and injuries happen in children 5-years-old and younger, according to Nationwide Children's. Doctors ...
Small but powerful button cell batteries, commonly found in household items like remote controls, watches, thermometers, ...
Many of them are powered by what are called button cell (or coin cell) batteries, aptly named because of their shape and small size. These batteries are powerful and compact. Unfortunately ...
The Oklahoma Poison Center released a statement on Monday urging parents to secure button batteries before the holidays. “Especially this time of year, batteries come along with gifts.