Think safety for New Year’s fireworks

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    Fireworks eye safety
    Fireworks eye safety

    LOUISVILLE, Ky. – If you choose to mark the stroke of midnight on New Year’s Eve with the bang of fireworks, take steps to keep the celebration safe. An eye injury is no way to start the new year.

    The Consumer Product Safety Commission reported that nearly 12,000 people were treated in emergency rooms for fireworks-related injuries in the United States in 2015, and about 2,000 of those were eye injuries. Fireworks can cause eye damage through chemical or thermal burns and injuries to the eyeball, resulting in permanent vision loss.

    Sidharth Puri, M.D., a resident physician with the University of Louisville Department of Ophthalmology and Visual Sciences, hopes to keep Louisville residents aware of the dangers posed by fireworks.

    “These are not benign, safe, colorful toys. They are miniaturized explosions and they have to be treated with care. These injuries are preventable,” Puri said. “If we can reach one child or one family member and prevent a firework from going off too near their face and blinding them, that is our goal – to save at least one person’s vision.”

    Puri offers the following safety tips:

    • Do NOT let young children play with fireworks of any type, even sparklers.
    • Always wear protective eyewear when handling fireworks and ensure that all bystanders are also wearing eye protection.
    • Leave the lighting of professional-grade fireworks to trained pyrotechnicians

    If an eye injury from fireworks occurs:

    • Seek medical attention immediately!
    • Do not rub your eyes
    • Do not rinse your eyes
    • Do not apply pressure
    • Do not remove any objects that are stuck in the eye
    • Do not apply ointments or take any blood-thinning pain medications such as aspirin or ibuprofen

    Download a printable PDF file of the eye safety guide here.

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    Betty Coffman
    Betty Coffman is a Communications Coordinator focused on research and innovation at UofL. A UofL alumna and Louisville native, she served as a writer and editor for local and national publications and as an account services coordinator and copywriter for marketing and design firms prior to joining UofL’s Office of Communications and Marketing.