cross-posted from: https://lemmy.sdf.org/post/45088835

A 13-year-old boy in New Zealand swallowed up to 100 high-power magnets he bought on Temu, forcing surgeons to remove tissue from his intestines, doctors said on Oct 24.

After suffering four days of abdominal pain, the unnamed teen was taken to Tauranga Hospital on the North Island.

“He disclosed ingesting approximately 80 to 100 5x2mm high-power (neodymium) magnets about one week prior,” said a report by hospital doctors in the New Zealand Medical Journal.

The magnets, which have been banned in New Zealand since January 2013, were bought on online shopping platform Temu, they said.

An X-ray showed the magnets had clumped together in four straight lines inside the child’s intestines.

“These appeared to be in separate parts of bowel adhered together due to magnetic forces,” they said.

[…]

Surgeons operated to remove the dead tissue and retrieve the magnets, and the child was able to return home after an eight-day spell in hospital.

“This case highlights not only the dangers of magnet ingestion but also the dangers of the online marketplace for our paediatric population,” said the authors of the paper, Dr Binura Lekamalage, Dr Lucinda Duncan-Were and Dr Nicola Davis.

Surgery for ingestion of magnets can lead to complications later in life such as bowel obstruction, abdominal hernia and chronic pain, they said.

[…]

  • I Cast Fist@programming.dev
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    6 days ago

    The real question that remains unanswered: why the fuck did that boy try to earn a Darwin Award? One or two would be an accident, 100 is done on purpose

    • AceOnTrack@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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      6 days ago

      I get an unsupervised toddler eating something they shouldn’t have been able to get to in the first place…

      A 13 years old should at least have a functional brain.

        • AnyOldName3@lemmy.world
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          6 days ago

          Planking was just lying down on things, so hardly an instance of teenagers endangering themselves.

          The tide pod thing wasn’t exactly what it seemed to be. Some children with learning disabilities and some people with dementia had died from mistaking laundry pods for food. At some point, some media outlets decided to sensationalise it by leaving out the bit about learning disabilities. That meant that there were teenagers who thought other teenagers had died from eating them, so they could make videos pretending they’d done that, just like teenagers have staged videos to make it look like they’re doing dangerous things that they aren’t really doing ever since people have let them have cameras. Some of them decided that the easiest way to pretend was to put a real laundry pod in their mouth, pretend to chew it and swallow, pretend to die, and then cut the video and spit it out. If they checked the relevant warnings on the packet, they just said not to eat them and to rinse their eyes if they got any there, so this plan might seem safe. However, laundry pods are so corrosive against mucous membranes that putting one in your mouth and spitting it out immediately because it starts to burn immediately can still be fatal or cause permanent injury. The media reported the deaths and injuries as if teenagers were intentionally eating laundry pods, rather than pretending in a way the packet implied might be safe, so most people weren’t learning that pretending was also deadly and that the warnings on the packet weren’t exhaustive, so it just made fake tide pod challenge videos even more tempting. If the reporting had been more responsible, then most people would have first heard even pretending to eat laundry pods can kill rather than teenagers are eating laundry pods.

          • FahrenheitGhost@lemmy.world
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            3 days ago

            That’s a good point and I appreciate the details. The only one that I can really remember is exactly that. A kid who popped in his mouth and it burst on accident.

          • Bosht@lemmy.world
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            6 days ago

            I only knew snippets of this as well even years later so I appreciate the rundown. Thanks for typing it up!

          • Buddahriffic@lemmy.world
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            5 days ago

            I think they are referring to people who did it in incredibly stupid places. There were planking fatalities, falls from cliffs and balconies. Darwin award winners.

            • FahrenheitGhost@lemmy.world
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              3 days ago

              Yeah. Exactly that. I’m thinking of the ones who were falling off the balconies. I know that they were very small minority, but I felt it was still an example.

            • YiddishMcSquidish@lemmy.today
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              5 days ago

              I must’ve been checked out by then, cause I only saw people doing it in real life. And it was usually pretty safe spots around the university I was at att.

              • Buddahriffic@lemmy.world
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                5 days ago

                Yeah, I think the vast majority weren’t in that dumb of places, though I bet there were a ton of smaller injuries that didn’t make the news, because the whole point of the trend was to do it in shocking or obnoxious places (at least for the ones trying to go viral). But I’d guess the majority of people who did it weren’t trying to go viral but just trying to fit in and applied some common sense to it.

      • douglasg14b@lemmy.world
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        6 days ago

        Not all of them do, especially mentally unwell children or ones with developmental disorders

  • Redex@lemmy.world
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    6 days ago

    Not gonna lie, banning 5x2mm magnets is insane. They’re very useful, I’ve seen countless DIY projects or 3D print models that use them and in general they’re just handy. It seems insane to me to ban them for such a reason. There are infinite ways in which children can hurt themselves, should we ban stoves because they can get hot? That ban sounds a bit too much to me.

  • 87Six@lemmy.zip
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    7 days ago

    Yea I feel like Temu is not at fault here, but rather, a lack of parents and a lack of brain

    • veni_vedi_veni@lemmy.world
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      6 days ago

      How do we know this wasnt a stupid TikTok trend like the forbidden fruit/tidepod thing?

      Maybe ban or actively filter that shit first?

      • 87Six@lemmy.zip
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        6 days ago

        Another massive brain skill issue, lack of education, and no parents

        It wasn’t illegal to eat dirt and worms when I was a kid, but my parents told me not to, so I didn’t.

        You don’t need the governments controlling children through laws. Parents have that role. And education. End of story.

      • BackgrndNoize@lemmy.world
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        6 days ago

        That’s on dumb parents sticking a tablet or a phone in their kids face before they can even learn to walk, so they don’t have to engage with them or put any effort towards raising them, such people should stop reproducing and the world will be a better place for it

    • Hotznplotzn@lemmy.sdf.orgOP
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      7 days ago

      Reading helps.

      The magnets, which have been banned in New Zealand since January 2013, were bought on online shopping platform Temu.

      • Taleya@aussie.zone
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        6 days ago

        As an older Queer, i gotta tell you “They are bad because it’s illegal” is not a good argument

        • Jax@sh.itjust.works
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          6 days ago

          But if it’s illegal that must mean it’s bad?

          Ok now that we established that I have to go mindlessly coagulate in front of my 60th re-run of NCIS.

      • 87Six@lemmy.zip
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        6 days ago

        And? If you need to ban magnets country wide, the issue is probably the country’s education system, not the magnets or the seller of the magnets.

        You know what else helps? Having a brain, and parents that aren’t incompetent.

    • regedit@lemmy.zip
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      6 days ago

      How else is he going to get out all the metal shards he ate?! It’s like if a bird gets stuck in the wall and you use a cat to get the bird out!

        • Dasus@lemmy.world
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          6 days ago

          I think the kid might’ve been avoiding hardware disease

          They do that by feeding cows magnets.

          (no but seriously 100 small magnets on purpose is something else)

          • ArmchairAce1944@discuss.online
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            4 days ago

            Well I did! But I didnt wrestle the raccoon, I helped him get some more from a greedy cigar smoking capitalist aardvark, then we danced to this all night.

            Of course when I woke up there was just a bunch of dead raccoons around me and I was wearing a shirt that said ‘nyuk nyuk nyuk’ with the three stooges… something tells me I might have already been high the whole time!

    • jcs@lemmy.world
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      6 days ago

      It could be a desperate suicide attempt. The magnets get trapped in the bowels by sticking together at various points, necrotizing or rupturing the intestines or other tissues, which can cause peritonitis or ultimately sepsis, which can be fatal.

        • jcs@lemmy.world
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          4 days ago

          Agreed. A few of my physician/nursing friends mentioned that they see these kinds of injuries on rare occasions and have always been attributed to patients in serious mental/emotional distress, so this level of desperation is unfortunately still out there.

  • Archangel1313@lemmy.ca
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    6 days ago

    I have very little sympathy for any 13 year old dumb enough to eat magnets. I have zero sympathy for any 13 year old that ate a hundred of them.

    • BussyCat@lemmy.world
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      6 days ago

      It didn’t say in the article but would you have empathy if he was special needs. Because I am also at a loss for how a non special needs child could eat hundreds of magnets

    • Frezik@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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      6 days ago

      I kinda get it. These things come as a cylinder. He didn’t so much swallow 100 individual magnets, but rather swallowed a complete cylinder package of them. The x-ray tends to confirm that.

      Still, if you’re 13 years old, you’re old enough to understand why you shouldn’t swallow everything in front of you.

  • lechekaflan@lemmy.world
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    6 days ago

    Was scratching my head wondering what got him into swallowing so many of those magnets for no other logical reason in the first place, except maybe because of some online Tiktok dare where logic is thrown out of the window.

  • Wilco@lemmy.zip
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    7 days ago

    And they laugh at the USA because Kinder eggs with toys in them are banned.

  • Dasus@lemmy.world
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    7 days ago

    Bullshit propaganda to try to soften age restrictions coming in to fkin everything.

  • WereHacker@lemmy.ml
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    6 days ago

    I have … hmm … questions … but I guess a ban was in order … I mean given the … circumstances … but why!?

  • remon@ani.social
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    6 days ago

    What the hell is wrong with NZ? Are they trying to out nanny-state the UK?