CHICAGO - Injuries from trendy roller shoes are far more numerous than
previously thought, contributing to about 1,600 emergency room visits last year,
the US Consumer Product Safety Commission said Wednesday.
An undated photo provided by Heelys Inc., shows a pair of
teenagers wearing the company's trendy wheeled sneakers. Heelys and their
knockoffs look like gym shoes, but with wheel sockets in each heel.
[AP]
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The injuries were mostly in
children, the target market for the wheeled shoes that send kids cruising down
sidewalks, across playgrounds and through shopping mall crowds.
Scott Wolfson, a spokesman for the Consumer Product Safety Commission, said
last week that the agency knew of at least 64 roller shoe-related injuries and
one death between September 2005 through December 2006.
The new higher estimate is based on a more recent and thorough examination by
staff statisticians of data reported to the agency, Wolfson told the AP
Wednesday.
The update follows new safety advice posted online Tuesday by the American
Academy of Orthopaedic Surgeons, which recommends helmets, wrist protectors and
knee and elbow pads for kids who wear wheeled shoes.
The academy's advice stems from recent reports from around the globe about
doctors treating cracked skulls; broken wrists, arms and ankles; and dislocated
elbows in kids injured wearing the shoes.
On Monday, a report in June's Pediatrics said 67 children were treated for
roller-shoe injuries at a hospital in Dublin, Ireland, over 10 weeks last
summer.
Heelys, the most popular brand, are sold in 70 countries. They're made by
Carrollton, Texas-based Heelys Inc. The shoes feature removable wheels in each
heel that pop out when wearers shift their weight to their heels.
The company responded to the higher injury estimate by releasing a statement
about their shoes' safety from Edward Heiden, president of Heiden Associates, a
product safety consulting firm that Heelys hired to study the shoes.
"The injury rate of using wheeled footwear has not increased in the past 15
months. More wheeled shoes are being sold and so, as you would expect, more
incidents are being reported," Heiden said.
Heelys reported in April that a Heiden Associates analysis of data from the
government's product safety commission showed the shoes have a lower injury rate
than many other sports, including skateboarding, inline skating and even
swimming.
Heiden said the new numbers confirm that previous analysis, "which tells us
using wheeled footwear is 42 times safer than basketball, 29 times safer than
bicycling, and 18 times safer than skateboarding."