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Toy-Related Injuries Published: ()


While toys provide entertainment and fun, they can also cause or contribute to injuries, some serious, among children and youth.

The Canadian Hospitals Injury Reporting and Prevention Program (CHIRPP) is a sentinel surveillance system that collects injury and poisoning data from the emergency departments of 11 pediatric and 9 general hospitals across Canada.


What we know about toy-related injuries from CHIRPP

How were cases identified?

The information below shows the toy-related injuriesFootnote i among children and youth aged 17 and under from CHIRPP for the last 10 years (April 1, 2011 – November 9, 2022).


Toy-related injuries by age and sex

Between April 1, 2011 and November 9, 2022 there were 29,268 cases of toy-related injuries, with 63% occurring in males and 37% in females (n = 18,537 and n = 10,731 respectively).

The number of toy-related injuries by age group are as follows:

  • less than 1 year (n = 1,012, 3.5%)
  • 1 to 4 years (n = 13,298, 45.4%)
  • 5 to 9 years (n = 8,590, 29.3%)
  • 10 to 17 years (n = 6,368, 21.8%)


What types of toys caused the most injuries?

Table 1 presents the most common toy categories that were associated with the largest number of injuries by age group where the toy category was known (n = 21,217). Information on the specific toy is not always provided to the emergency department or recorded by them. This occurred in 27.5% (n = 8,051) of the cases.

Table 1. Toy categories associated with the largest number of injuries by age group, CHIRPP, April 1, 2011 to November 9, 2022
Age group Toy category Number of cases Percent*
Less than 1 year Riding toys 56 16.4%
Toy cars or toy trucks 43 12.6%
Building sets 40 11.7%
Toy chests and boxes 29 8.5%
Blocks, stacking toys and pull toys 26 7.6%
1 to 4 years Riding toys 1,111 14.2%
Building sets 974 12.5%
Toy cars or toy trucks 932 12.0%
Scooters 733 9.4%
Balls 572 7.3%
5 to 9 years Scooters 3,141 44.6%
Balls 886 12.6%
Building sets 489 6.9%
Toy sports equipment 385 5.5%
Toy weapons and projectile toys 276 3.9%
10 to 17 years Scooters 3,965 65.8%
Balls 900 14.9%
Toy weapons and projectile toys 204 3.4%
Flying toys, including kites, Frisbees, boomerang 189 3.1%
Toy sports equipment 181 3.0%

*Excludes n = 8,051 cases where the toy type was not specified. Percentages are calculated among each age group and do not add up to 100% as only the top five toy categories for each age group are listed. Within the less than 1 year age group, just under 20% of cases occurred among infants less than 6 months of age.



What were the most common toy-related injuries?

Overall, open wound injuries (23.5%) were the most frequent toy-related injury, followed by fractures (19.0%) and bruises/abrasions or soft tissue injuries (16.2%).

The most frequent types of injuries varied by age group:

  • Less than 1 year: Traumatic brain injuries at 29.1%, followed by foreign body injuriesFootnote ii at 16.0%.
  • 1 to 4 years: Open wounds at 32.3%, followed by foreign body injuries at 17.1%.
  • 5 to 17 years: Fractures at 28.7%, followed by bruises/abrasions or soft tissue injuries at 19.8%.


How did the toy-related injuries happen?

The 4 most common mechanisms of toy-related injuries were:

  1. Falls, including tripping over toy (n = 17,272, 59.0%)
  2. Struck by/against objects (n = 6,249, 21.4%)
  3. Foreign body entering into or through a natural orifice, including eye, ear, nose, and genitourinary tract (n = 2,012, 6.9%)
  4. Ingestion or inhalation/aspiration of foreign body, except food (n = 1,736, 5.9%)


What percentage of cases were admitted to hospital?

Hospital admission was required for 2.6% of toy-related injury cases (n = 773), of which the majority were hospitalized for fractures (55.0%). Other injuries requiring hospital admission included foreign body in the alimentary tract (11.8%), foreign body in the respiratory tract (6.7%) and traumatic brain injury (5.2%).



What types of injuries occurred from certain toys?

Injuries related to children's wagons (n = 499) most frequently included traumatic brain injury (31.9%) and fracture (21.0%). The majority of the time (82.2%) these injuries were due to falls from the wagon.

Foreign body injuries were the most frequent nature of injury caused by small toys or toy parts including marbles, building sets, modelling compounds, magnetic sets, board games, battery-operated toys and balloons. Examples of foreign body injuries include those of the alimentary tract, respiratory tract, nose, ear canal, external eye or genitourinary tract.

Of the 1,418 riding toy-related injuries, open wound (29.5%) was the most frequent injury, followed by traumatic brain injury (21.4%) and fracture (17.8%). Riding-toy related injuries often occurred due to falling off the riding toy (85.1%).

Fracture (40.0%), bruises/abrasions or soft tissue injury (23.0%) and open wound (14.8%) represented the majority of all scooter-related injuries (n = 7,842). Falling (89.1%) while scootering was the most common mechanism of injury.

The majority of injuries related to toy weapons and projectile toys (n = 591) were eye injuries (36.7%) and open wounds (30.1%), largely from being struck by or against an object (81.9%).

Open wound (32.3%), traumatic brain injury (19.0%), and fracture (16.8%) were the most frequent children's tricycle-related injuries (n = 607). These injuries often occurred from falling off the tricycle (79.7%).



Prevention and safety tips

Below are tips on ways to prevent toy-related injuries from occurringreference 1

  • Make sure to choose age-appropriate toys. Toys for older children may contain small parts or present other hazards that make them unsafe for younger children.
  • Check that the toy is sturdy, well made and in good condition.
  • Make sure to read toy instructions and ensure children are using toys how they were intended to be used.
  • Do not give young children toys with small parts/accessories.
  • Do not give children novelty magnet sets.
  • Make sure that batteries are securely contained in the toy and that they are not accessible to the child.
  • Be careful with button batteries, as they can result in significant injury or death if swallowed.
  • Make sure any riding toys you buy are appropriate for your child's size, age and abilities.

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Data limitations

The results presented above do not represent all toy-related injuries in Canada. CHIRPP is a sentinel surveillance system that collects data from select emergency departments across Canada. Injuries involving Indigenous peoples including Inuit, Métis and First Nations and people who live in rural areas may be under-represented in the CHIRPP database, as most CHIRPP hospital sites are located in major cities. Fatal injuries are also under-represented in the CHIRPP database as the emergency department data do not capture deaths occurring before being taken to the hospital or after being admitted via another department. Information is continuously entered into the CHIRPP database; therefore, some years do not yet have complete data.

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