Posted on 08/05/2022 12:49:40 PM PDT by nickcarraway
Congress has passed a bipartisan bill named after a toddler who died after ingesting a battery. Reese's Law, named for Reese Hamsmith, who died last year at 18 months old, strengthens safety standards for products with button batteries, commonly found in everyday items.
U.S. Sens. Marsha Blackburn, a Tennessee Republican, and Richard Blumenthal, a Democrat from Connecticut, introduced the legislation nicknamed Reese's Law in the Senate earlier this year.
"We are relieved this common-sense legislation has passed Congress and is on its way to President Biden's desk to become law so families can have greater peace of mind about the safety of products in their home," the pair said in a news release following the bill's passage in the Senate on Wednesday.
In 2020, Hamsmith swallowed a small, flat battery, called a button cell or coin battery, which are often found in household items like cameras, calculators, flashing apparel and even greeting cards. "If swallowed, these batteries can pose a serious danger to young children and infants, and can cause serious injuries, severe internal burns, or even death," the news release reads.
About a month later, she died after a long hospital stay.
The legislation will create performance standards that require these batteries to be secured, require warning labels and require that the warning labels clearly identify the hazard of ingestion, among other things.
The legislation will undoubtedly save lives, Reese's mother, Trista Hamsmith, said in a statement. "I often talk about the plaque that was in Reese's hospital room which read, 'He has a plan and I have a purpose.' Reese's life was taken way too soon, but her legacy will live on through this law so that no other family will have to suffer like ours," she said.
Hamsmith announced the introduction of the legislation at the Capitol in September 2021. The bill was introduced in the House by a group of bipartisan representatives, where it passed earlier this year.
Following her daughter's death, Hamsmith founded Reese's Purpose, an organization that advocates to protect children from hidden dangers and threats to their safety. She created a Change.org petition to raise awareness about the issue and the legislation and urged people to call their representatives and ask them to pass the bill.
Button batteries, also known as lithium batteries, can get stuck in the throat when swallowed and saliva triggers an electric current which can cause a chemical reaction. The esophagus can be severely burned in as little as two hours and it could lead to death, according to Children's Hospital of Philadelphia, or CHOP.
If you suspect your child has swallowed a button battery, CHOP says to look for signs like drooling, decreased eating or drinking, difficulty swallowing, hoarse voice, vomiting, chest pain or discomfort, abdominal pain, blood in saliva and stool and sudden crying.
If you think your child has swallowed a battery, they should be taken to the emergency room immediately.
Do not give the child anything to eat or drink, or any medications to make then move their bowels or vomit, CHOP says. Milk will not prevent further injury.
"Do not attempt the Heimlich maneuver, even if you saw your child swallow the battery," they advise. "The battery could get stuck another area or change its location and increase the risk of injury."
To prevent this from happening, parents should know where these batteries are in their home and keep them out of reach from children, and spread the word about the risk, CHOP says.
You can never have too many safety laws, I always say.
Actually, no, not really.
Not bad parenting, bad batteries.....................
Thank Goodness we now have common sense battery control.
On the other hand, we should make it easier for people to sterilize themselves.
I expect this non-stop, stupid and virtue-signalling useless regulation from progressives like Blumenthal, but Blackburn claims to be a conservative.
Why not just require all battery’s to be made no smaller or less in weight that the common building brick? I.e., to me this is just a ‘there ought to be a law’ feel good vote that actually won’t solve the base problem of children figuring out how to dismantle something that one would not expect them to have the ability to do, or their parents not being safety conscious.
I have a 2 year old grand daughter who has gotten good at climbing and getting into places that we think we had made it ‘impossible’ for her to access.
I don’t know how even the best parent can possibly keep track, every moment, of every item a toddler might find and put in its mouth. Sometimes accidents just happen, and there’s no way we can legislate that away.
So billion dollar industry will have to change and modify all of its batteries at a cost of billions and billions of dollars because a parent carelessly left a button battery out for her child to swallow.
4500 pages?
We need a law that bans all small objects. Because if it saves just one life it’s worth it.
These warning labels will be larger than the items that use button batteries.
-PJ
I'll admit I've never heard anything about that before.
Good grief. This is why it takes a blow torch and a PHD to open a bottle of Tylenol.
Kids swallow stuff. As a parent, it’s your job to see to it that your kid doesn’t swallow the wrong stuff.
Their ability to do that is amazing.
Politicians would never ban their own brains.
“The legislation will undoubtedly save lives”
...NO. It’ll raise the price of batteries for everyone. But we’re all in this together, right?
Thank goodness I was born at a time when a law called “The Tijeras_Slim Matchbox Car Wheel up His Nose” would never have happened.
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