Members Login
Username 
 
Password 
    Remember Me  
 

Topic: Ten Children Mistakenly Drink Wiper Fluid At Ark. Day Care

Page 1 of 1  sorted by
Wide (rest of width)
Narrow (200px)
DJ Hot Head Shabba
Status: Offline
Posts: 6722
Date:

Ten Children Mistakenly Drink Wiper Fluid At Ark. Day Care

A daycare center for children near Scott, Ark., is shown Friday, March 13, 2009.
AP  A daycare center for children near Scott, Ark., is shown Friday, March 13, 2009. Arkansas Children's 

LITTLE ROCK, Ark. Ten children at an Arkansas day-care center drank windshield wiper fluid after the owner served it from a container mistaken for Kool-Aid and placed in a refrigerator, authorities said Friday. The day-care owner voluntarily surrendered her state license Friday.

Doctors estimate the children, ages 2 to 7, drank about an ounce of the blue fluid late Thursday afternoon before realizing it tasted wrong, said Laura James, a pediatric pharmacologist and toxicologist at Arkansas Children's Hospital in Little Rock.

Only one child remained hospitalized Friday in good condition, after *lo** samples showed "measurable levels" of methanol, a highly toxic alcohol that can induce comas and cause blindness, officials said. In moderate cases, it can cause nausea, vomiting, staggering and sleepiness, James said.

The day care also provided the fluid for testing.

The owner bought the windshield wiper fluid with several other items on a recent shopping trip, James told The Associated Press. "This product was mistakenly grabbed and thought to be Kool-Aid and put in the refrigerator," she said.

The day care's owner, Carolyn Bynum, was interviewed Friday by child welfare investigators and gave up her license, said Julie Munsell, a spokeswoman for the state Department of Human Services. Bynum declined to comment to the AP, but Munsell said she accepted "total responsibility" for the incident.

"She was so upset about what had occurred and she was definitely worried some of the children had been injured," Munsell said. "It was just a mistake, she says. She says it was just a horrible mistake."

Bynum's license had allowed her to care for 10 children in her home in Scott, about 15 miles east of Little Rock. Munsell said Bynum had no found complaints or serious compliance issues since receiving the license in 2002.

By surrendering her license, Bynum can no longer care for the children without reapplying. State law requires a license when someone cares for more than five children from more than one family at the same time in their home.

The toxicologist warned that many antifreeze or windshield wiper solutions have bright colors, which can be mistaken for fruit drinks.

"I think the take-home message is not to have these products in the kitchen or where you're doing any kind of food preparation," she said.

 



-- Edited by alligcold on Friday 13th of March 2009 05:32:20 PM

__________________

Soundcloud Channel: https://soundcloud.com/chris-harris-791093615

Youtube: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCGEedJmx9bd8UwyriTuWqxQ?view_as=subscriber
Super Member
Status: Offline
Posts: 2236
Date:
awoow...

__________________
jamaicaadverts.com
Status: Offline
Posts: 10001
Date:
dammmn

__________________

mediabanner.gif


۞ Shampoo ۞
Status: Offline
Posts: 20869
Date:
CRAZY

__________________


species.com
mzchatstudy.com
Shampoo
23ti5ah.gif

**MZ Controversy**
Status: Offline
Posts: 4518
Date:
thats so sad...it was an honest mistake sadsad

__________________
Love is Dead...

So few of us really think, what we do is rearrange our prejudges...

Education is not necessarily Liberation from Ignorance...


Page 1 of 1  sorted by
Quick Reply

Please log in to post quick replies.