IKEA Removes Window Blinds Hazardous To Kids
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Allard1/iStock Editorial/Thinkstock(NEW YORK) — IKEA announced Thursday that its U.S. stores will no longer stock window blinds with pull cords long-blamed for strangulation deaths and injuries to children.
The retailer is the latest to remove from its inventory the widely-used product containing what the U.S. Consumer Product Safety Commission (CPSC) calls of one of the five deadliest “hidden home hazards.”
Some window blinds are made with pull cords that can tangle and create a choking hazard for children who may play with them. According to statistics released by the CPSC, nearly one young child per month dies from strangulation by window blind cords.
The Swedish retailer made the announcement at the start of Window Covering Safety Month.
“IKEA is committed to working together with our customers to raise awareness of this important issue and to help families get the knowledge they need to ensure a safer everyday life at home,” said Heather Spatz, IKEA U.S. Country Sales Manager.
IKEA said that starting Thursday, it will only carry window blinds or coverings that have either no cords or inaccessible cords.
The retailer noted that its global stores will make the transition by January 2016.
CPSC reports there have been at least 285 cases of fatal or serious injury strangulation of young children due to window blind cords from 1996 to 2012. The CPSC is now currently considering imposing a mandatory standard on the manufacturing and selling of corded blinds, which are popular in part because they tend to be inexpensive.
IKEA is the latest large retailer to make the announcement it would no longer carry corded blinds.
Last year Target informed the CPSC that it would phase out corded blinds from its inventory, and in a recent statement to ABC News, the Minneapolis-based giant said “the entire Target blinds assortment is now cordless,” calling product safety a “top priority.”
The CPSC provides recommendations for preventing strangulations by window cords in its Window Covering Safety Center website.
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