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mellowsong
11-10-07, 01:11 PM
U.S. safety officials have recalled about 4.2 million Chinese-made Aqua Dots bead toys that contain a chemical that has caused some children to vomit and become comatose after swallowing them.http://i.l.cnn.net/cnn/2007/US/11/08/toy.recall/art.bindeez.toy.jpg Bindeez, which were named Australia's toy of the year, contain a chemical that converts into a "date rape" drug.


http://www.cnn.com/.element/img/2.0/mosaic/base_skins/baseplate/corner_wire_BL.gif


Scientists have found the popular toy's coating contains a chemical that, once metabolized, converts into the toxic "date rape" drug GHB, or gamma-hydroxy butyrate, U.S. Consumer Product Safety Commission spokesman Scott Wolfson told CNN.
"GHB is this drug that in low doses actually causes euphoria," said Dr. Sanjay Gupta, CNN's chief medical correspondent. "In higher doses, it can cause people to go into a coma. It can cause seizures. It can cause something known as hypotonia, where all your muscles just become very flaccid.
"And it can cause people to become amnestic, ... which is why it became a date-rape drug," Gupta said.
"So this is nasty stuff, and it appears that the chemical is actually converting into it in the body."
The arts and craft beads, aimed at children 4 years and older, have been selling since April at major U.S. retail stores as "Aqua Dots" and in Australia under the name "Bindeez Beads."
CPSC spokeswoman Julie Vallese said anyone with Aqua Dots at home should immediately take the toy away from children and contact distributor Spin Master Ltd. to return for free replacement beads or a toy of equal value.
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For additional information, contact Spin Master at 1-800-622-8339 between 9 a.m. and 6 p.m. ET, Monday through Friday.
The toy was named toy of the year in Australia and recently made Wal-Mart Stores Inc.'s list of top 12 Christmas toys.
Wal-Mart on Thursday listed Aqua Dots on its Web site as "out of stock online" and had removed them from its top toy list.
Toronto-based Spin Master stopped shipping Aqua Dots and asked retailers to pull them off their shelves, where they had sold for $17 to $30. http://i.l.cnn.net/cnn/.element/img/2.0/mosaic/tabs/video.gif Watch what's known about the beads » (http://www.cnn.com/2007/US/11/08/toy.recall/index.html#cnnSTCVideo)
Melbourne-based Moose Enterprise Pty. Ltd. recalled Bindeez Beads on Tuesday after three children in Australia swallowed large quantities of the beads and were hospitalized.
"I was so frightened because I thought she wasn't going to make it," Heather Lehane told CNN affiliate Network 7 of her 10-year-old daughter, Charlotte, who was sickened by the beads.
In the United States, the Washington-based safety commission said it has received two reports detailing the severe effects of the digested beads.
The CPSC said a boy nearly 2 years old "swallowed several dozen beads. He became dizzy and vomited several times before slipping into a comatose state." The toddler was hospitalized and has since fully recovered, the commission added.
In the second incident, a child vomited, fell into a coma and was hospitalized for five days. It was not immediately clear whether the child had made a full recovery.
The recall is the latest to target Chinese-made toys.

I saw these recently in a gift catalog and was all set to order them for my grandson's birthday in December....This has gone beyond appalling.
Patty

Reesacat
11-10-07, 01:43 PM
Words fail me. I am so glad you found out before you ordered them for your precious grandson.

Is there a website parents/grandparents can go to to find safe toys?

mellowsong
11-10-07, 01:59 PM
Reesacat,
Since I heard about this last night, I've been trying to find stuff. Most of it is pretty negative even going as far as to say just don't buy anything from China. Here's some of the most practical suggestions I've seen:
"Our best advice to parents is to keep track of the recalls," said Patty Davis, spokeswoman for the U.S. Consumer Product Safety Commission, the government agency charged with safeguarding the $22 billion U.S. toy industry.

Consumers can sign up for recall alerts on the agency's Web site, www.cpsc.gov (http://www.cpsc.gov).

"You will be seeing more recalls for lead in children's products, but as more testing is done, we anticipate the number of those recalls will decline," Davis said. (Last week, for instance, more than 660,000 lead-tainted toys made in China were recalled, including 38,000 "Go Diego Go!" toys from Mattel).

Parents wanting to avoid Chinese toys altogether may find there are few remaining options, said Don Mays, a consumer-product-safety expert at Consumers Union, publisher of Consumer Reports.

"Eighty percent of [U.S.] toys are made in China, so unless you want to buy your child a puppy for Christmas, you are pretty much stuck with buying toys from China," said Mays, the union's senior director of product-safety planning.

Along with keeping track of the constant stream of recall news, Mays suggests that parents avoid buying toys from dollar stores or flea markets this holiday season. Further, he said, do-it-yourself lead-testing kits sold at hardware stores could serve as another potential aid.

The kits, which the Consumer Product Safety Commission recently said are unreliable, are not perfect, Mays admits. Still, he said, "they can be a good screening tool to see if there is an excessive level of lead in toys."

"At the least," he added, "it would give them more information than they have now."

Back in the toy aisles, Orlando resident Bernadette Echeverry said she's not sure what, if any, Christmas toys she will buy for her two young daughters, given all the bad news.

While looking at plastic Barbie and Polly Pocket accessories at the Wal-Mart on East Colonial Drive, Echeverry said: "Everything is made in China, so it scares you, especially right now."
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http://safetoyinfo.blogspot.com/ This site lists recent recalls.

http://www.maukilo.com/?gclid=CJWl4Jj60o8CFQKHPAodznLwAA
This one features European made toys that are supposed to be safe.
I guess everyone can just do searches like I did and find safe alternatives. Personally, I think I'm going to avoid buying anything that comes from China. It's become blatantly obvious that they can't be trusted to do what's right and the manufacturer's/distributors don't bother with inspections/quality control!

Reesacat
11-10-07, 02:02 PM
Bless you! Thank you for the excellent research! I will do the same-there is a very disturbing pattern emerging about all products from China.

mellowsong
11-10-07, 06:46 PM
I just went to mercola and found this story there. I didn't realize had been posted there too. I found out about it last night and just wanted to make sure it got posted here. I even submitted an article to newstarget saying "in case" nobody else had it covered, lol.