Leave pyrotechnics to the pros |
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Jody Eder-Zdechlik remembers the Fourth of July when she was 2. In fact, every day this resident of Lakeland, Minn., is reminded of it. It was on that fateful holiday that a bottle rocket shot into her eye and blinded her.
She was celebrating the Independence Day holiday at a family gathering. Like many Fourth of July parties, relatives were shooting off fireworks. Someone put a bottle rocket in a pop bottle and tipped the bottle; the rocket shot directly into her eye. Four surgeries couldn't save her vision. Today, she has a prosthetic right eye and wears polycarbonate glasses to protect her other eye.
Jody, now 38, represents one of thousands of Americans injured by fireworks each year. And, like Jody, not all victims happen to be the person setting them off. In fact, 40 percent of fireworks injuries are to innocent bystanders. Bottle rockets, which can move as fast as 200 mph, account for nearly 75 percent of injuries.
Since 1941, fireworks have been illegal in Minnesota. That changed this spring, when the Legislature passed a bill legalizing the sale and use of sparklers, glow worms and other nonexplosive, nonaerial fireworks. The bill's sponsors had hoped to legalize a complete range of consumer fireworks, including firecrackers and bottle rockets. But opposition, especially in the Senate, forced them to scale back. Supporters plan on returning in future legislative sessions to try and legalize more fireworks.
"Many people think playing with fireworks is fun," said Robert Mittra, M.D., an
ophthalmologist with VitreoRetinal Surgery and medical director of the Minnesota Eye Injury Registry. "But what they don't realize is just how dangerous fireworks truly are."
Jody agrees.
"I still avoid fireworks. I don't even go to the big fireworks displays that the city puts on," Jody said. "You often hear people say they thought it could never happen to them. Well, freak accidents do happen. I'm proof of that."
Fireworks facts |
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