Kids & Family
Tide Pod Challenge: Police In Stafford Issue Warning
"The Tide Pod Challenge" social media craze has prompted a warning from the Stafford County Sheriff's Office. Namely, do it at your peril.
STAFFORD, VA — As a pre-emptive warning to residents about a bizarre and potentially deadly social media phenomenon known as "The Tide Pod Challenge," the Stafford County Sheriff's Office wants parents to talk to their kids about it, and youths to take note of the dangers. In a nutshell, people who are mostly teenagers have been filming themselves ingesting the laundry detergent pods and then posting the videos on social media.
The brightly colored pods, which can resemble candy to some children, contain a highly toxic mix of ethanol, hydrogen and polymers that is far more dangerous when ingested than traditional laundry detergent. At least 10 deaths have been attributed to the pods, according to the Consumer Products Safety Commission, and the American Association of Poison Control Centers said that in 2017, there were more than 10,500 reported exposures to the highly concentrated detergent by children age 5 and younger — those were accidental, unlike injuries to teens in the so-called challenge.
With both those things in mind, Stafford police also urge residents to keep cleaning products in child-resistant containers and stored out of the reach of young children. As to the social media challenge, anyone who has ingested a pod or sees someone doing so should call Poison Control at 800-222-1222 or text "poison" to 797979 to save the number as a contact in your phone.
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Tide isn't the only company brand offering the convenience of pre-packaged laundry detergent. The concentrated laundry packets are also known by such trade names as Pods, Mighty Pacs, Power Pacs, PowerBlasts, PowerCore Pacs and Flings.
Here are five things to know about the Tide Pod Challenge craze:
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How did the Tide Pod Challenge start? It seems to stem from a post on the satirical website The Onion picturing a little boy under the headline "So Help Me God, I'm Going To Eat One Of Those Multicolored Detergent Pods." The tongue-in-cheek post followed a report from the American Association of Poison Control Centers that the laundry packets pose a serious risk to children. The craze gained more traction with College Humor's "Don't Eat the Laundry Pods," which shows a college student gorging himself before ending up on an emergency backboard, where he proclaims "I don't regret it."
What happens when you eat a laundry detergent pod? Some children who have gotten into the pods have experienced excessive vomiting, wheezing and gasping, and some have had such severe breathing problems that they had to be put on a ventilator, according to the AAPCC.
Who else is at risk? The nonprofit consumer organization Consumer reports said the laundry detergent pods can be lethal to adults with dementia who may mistake them as edible. An 87-year-old Texas woman with dementia died two days after eating two packets. She was among six adults with dementia who died under similar circumstances from 2012 to early 2017, the Consumer Products Safety Commission says.
Has anyone called for a ban on laundry detergent packets? No, but organizations have called on manufacturers to create better packaging. The trade group American Cleaning Institute says manufacturers are fully committed to reducing accidental exposure to the products.
What does Procter & Gamble, which makes Tide, have to say about the challenge? Patch reached out to P&G for a comment on the craze. In a statement, the company said: "Our laundry pacs are a highly concentrated detergent meant to clean clothes and they're used safely in millions of households every day. They should be only used to clean clothes and kept up, closed and away from children. They should not be played with, whatever the circumstance is, even if meant as a joke."
This story was reported in part by Patch editor Beth Dalbey
Image via Tide.com
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