In 2020, around 198,000 toy-related injuries were treated in U.S. hospital emergency rooms – 75% of those happening to children 14 years of age or younger – according to the U.S. Consumer Product Safety Commission (CPSC). Nine children under 14 were killed in toy-related incidents that year, with those fatal incidents including things like asphyxiation from a balloon or rubber ball, suffocation in a toy chest and choking on small parts of a toy. Other notable findings from the CPSC's report on toy-related deaths and injuries in 2020 include:
- 42% of emergency department-treated injuries were lacerations, contusions or abrasions. The face and head were the most commonly affected areas of the body.
- Nonmotorized scooters were associated with the most injuries of any other identified toy for all ages, but were not responsible for any reported deaths in 2020.
- Building sets were responsible for 9% of injuries among children 4 and younger.
- With the exception of children 4 years and younger, the CPSC reported a "statistically significant decreasing trend" in estimated toy-related injuries from 2013 to 2020.
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