National Campaign for Firework Safety
Our aim is to promote the safe use of  fireworks


Medical and others Reports

Pediatrics  July 2001 Fireworks-Related Injuries to Children.
Fireworks are devices designed for the purpose of producing a visible or audible effect by combustion, deflagration, or detonation.
Every year, US residents celebrate the Fourth of July and other festive occasions with fireworks. As a result, in 1999, an estimated 8500 individuals, approximately 45% of them children younger than 15 years, sustained fireworks-related injuries requiring emergency medical treatment.
Since 1994, the annual number of people receiving emergency medical treatment for fireworks-related injuries has decreased by about one third.
The hands (40%), eyes (20%), and head and face (20%) are the body areas most often involved.
About one third of eye injuries from fireworks result in permanent blindness.
Burns account for more than half of fireworks-related injuries, and lacerations, contusions, and abrasions are also common.
During 1999, 16 people died as a result of injuries associated with fireworks.
Under regulations promulgated by the US Consumer Product Safety Commission (CPSC) in 1976, any firecracker containing more than 50 mg of explosive material is banned, although aerial devices may contain up to 130 mg of powder charge. In addition, CPSC regulations include fuse burn time limits, cautionary labeling requirements, and criteria to prevent tipover and blowout of devices.
Additional regulations address requirements for certain reloadable tube and aerial shell fireworks and the stability of multiple-tube devices.
Consumer fireworks, formerly known as "Class C" fireworks and often inappropriately referred to as "safe and sane" fireworks, include fountains and candles that shoot out sparks or flaming balls, rockets with sticks (called "bottle rockets," because it is customary to stand them in a soda bottle for ignition), other rockets, firecrackers, sparklers, and smoke devices. These are permitted under federal regulation, and their sale is regulated by state and local authorities.
At present, 10 states ban all consumer fireworks, and 5 additional states ban all consumer fireworks except sparklers, "snakes," or other novelty items.
In addition to ongoing injury surveillance, the CPSC conducts a special study each year of fireworks-related injuries requiring emergency medical care that occur around the Fourth of July.
The 1999 CPSC study found that one third of the fireworks-related injuries were caused by firecrackers, approximately 10% of which were illegal. Almost 20% of the injuries were from rockets. Notably, sparklers, which are mistakenly believed to be safe by many consumers, caused 10% of these fireworks-related injuries.
Although most sparkler-related injuries are minor bums and corneal abrasions, sparklers can reach temperatures greater than 1000 [degrees] F at the tip and can cause serious burns by igniting clothing.
One study found that two thirds of injuries from sparklers occurred among children 5 years and younger.
A case-control study designed to control for the popularity of various devices found firecrackers and aerial devices to be associated with the greatest risk of injury. It also found that the highest chance of injury requiring hospitalization occurred with illegal and homemade devices.
Half of the fireworks-related eye injuries and an even higher proportion of those resulting in permanent blindness or enucleation are caused by bottle rockets.
Every type of consumer firework has been associated with serious, injury or death.


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