This year, Santa’s bag of toys is a mixed bag where safety is concerned.
The Consumer Product Safety Commission is reporting that toy-related deaths among children under the age of 15 dropped to 12 in in 2009–down from 24 deaths both in 2007 and 2008.
The agency attributes the drop in deaths to stricter regulations on toys, including turning voluntary safety standards into mandatory regulations.
Another sign that the regulations are resulting in safer designs from toy makers: the number of recalls dropped to 44 in fiscal 2010, down from 50 in fiscal 2009. Both figures represent a substantial decrease from the 172 recalls in 2008. Fewer recalls for lead content in toys contributed to the decline.
Not all news regarding toy safety was positive, however. The CPSC reports that trips to the emergency room as a result of toy mishaps has increased from 152,000 in 2005 to 186,000 in 2009. This figure has been consistently rising over the past several years.
The toys most likely to result in injury or death are those that involve riding, from tricycles to scooters. In 58 percent of the deaths, a riding toy was the source of the accident, while scooters were behind more than a quarter of the trips to the emergency room.


