• Dagwood222@lemm.ee
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    1 年前

    Maybe I read it wrong, but it looks to me like getting rid of coins reduced all incidents of kids needing to go to the ER.

    • Manticore@lemmy.nz
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      1 年前

      Well tbf I think most ER visits from kids are these kinda incidents. So if you reduce the rate of these incidents, you significantly reduce kids ER visits overall

      • Dagwood222@lemm.ee
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        1 年前

        Here are my thoughts.

        Speaking as a former child, I don’t remember being particularly attracted to money as something to stick in my nose/ears. I did have to go once with a glass bead, but that’s the only visit I can remember for this particular condition.

        I assumed that the rate of kids sticking things i the nose/ears would be a constant, and that the objects would vary over time. I would have thought that coins would be replaced by Legos or candy.

        See what I’m getting at?

        • Manticore@lemmy.nz
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          1 年前

          That implies that kids are making an executive decision to stick things up their noses, and search for options. That can be true, like if their noses are really itchy; but it can also just whatever nearby miscellany they happen to be curious about.

          But really, its the shape is relevant. Because these are cases that require a parent takes them to ED, meaning they couldnt solve it themselves. A coin that goes up and turns flat is muuuch harder to get out than something with points or edges to grab, like a LEGO man. Perhaps it’s not that kids are sticking less things up there, it’s that coins are more likely to get trapped up there.

          I can’t tell you the minds of toddlers man, but if ED’s records say less toddlers are going to ED for nose-junk, then they probably are, and we can speculate on why that is.

          • Dagwood222@lemm.ee
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            1 年前

            That implies that kids are making an executive decision to stick things up their noses, and search for options

            This sounds like the start of a comedy skit.