93% of poisoning cases between 2006 and 2015, occurred at home, with half of the cases involving children. This is what National Poison Centre statistics have found, said the centre’s pharmacist (drug and poison information unit) Asdariah Misnan.
66% of cases recorded during the 10 year period comprised accidental poisoning involving household chemical products (33%) and medicines (33%). Among the accidental cases, 46% involved children aged one to nine.
The household chemicals include laundry detergent and bleach, as well as dishwashing liquid, she told Bernama when met at the centre at Universiti Sains Malaysia recently.
50% of all cases involve children, with the centre receiving calls about such poisoning cases on a daily basis. In reference to the total number of calls which the centre receives daily, she said there are normally between 10 and 20 calls in the day, and about 10 calls at night. Normally, cases involve household chemicals which are not stored in safe places away from the reach of children.
She said it was common to hear an adult storing a chemical in a cup, with the intention of using it soon after but then a child comes across it and consumes it, thinking that it is a drink.
Calling on adults to be careful when handling household chemicals, Asdariah recounted an incident last month in which a family member had stored dishwashing liquid in a little drink bottle which found its way to the fridge and was later consumed by someone else in the family.
Asdariah also urged parents to be extra vigilant with youngsters who love to experiment at home.
She recalled an incident in which a 10-year-old boy lost his eyebrows during an explosion from a bottle he had filled with calcium carbide powder and water - when the chemical reacted to the water, creating acetylene gas, the bottle which the boy had also shaken, exploded.
She advised anyone affected by a poison-related incident to seek immediate treatment at a hospital. The centre can also be contacted for advice.
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