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Fireworks Injuries and Eye Health

Many celebrate the 4th of July with sparklers and fireworks as a family tradition. In some areas, it’s hard to get to sleep at night because firework celebrations last until the early hours of the morning. Did you know that more than 7,000 people stay up late for a different reason that night? Thousands of people spend the night of July 4th in the emergency room because of injury to themselves or their child due to fireworks, according to data from the U.S. Consumer Product Safety Commission (CPSC). Hospitals even staff extra employees during the holiday to accommodate the influx in patients.

Can you guess one of the body parts commonly injured during these fireworks injuries? It’s your eyes.

According to the American Academy of Ophthalmologists, nearly 20% of all fireworks injuries affect the eyes. Explosions too close to one’s face can rupture the actual globe of the eye, burn one’s eye(s), cause retinal detachment or corneal abrasions. Eye-related fireworks injuries are very serious, causing vision loss or even blindness.

The cause of eye-related injuries isn’t always handling of the fireworks. Sometimes children are standing too close or look up as a dud firework comes back down. Fireworks are not toys, and explosives should be handled with care and thoughtfulness.

If you want to celebrate with a bang, keep your festivities safe by following these rules: