ONTD Political

14% of leg fractures in toddlers due to riding down the slide on an adult's lap

4:21 pm - 05/01/2012


Last spring, Katie Dickman of Dunkirk, Md., was at the playground with her 18-month-old toddler, Hannah, when the little girl asked to ride down a twisting slide. Ms. Dickman accompanied her daughter, carefully keeping the child on her lap as they coasted to the bottom.

But without warning, Hannah’s sneaker caught on the side of the slide. Although Ms. Dickman grabbed the leg and unstuck her daughter’s foot, by the time they reached the ground, the girl was whimpering and could not walk. A doctor’s visit later revealed a fractured tibia.

“My wife was just trying to keep Hannah extra safe and make sure she didn’t fall,” said Hannah’s father, Jed Dickman. “She felt very guilty about it.”

As the Dickmans soon learned, such injuries are surprisingly common. Although nobody keeps national statistics, orthopedic specialists say they treat a number of toddlers and young children each year with broken legs as a result of riding down the slide on a parent’s lap. A study at Winthrop University Hospital in Mineola, N.Y., found that nearly 14 percent of pediatric leg fractures over an 11-month period involved toddlers riding down the slide with a parent.

Dr. Edward Holt, the orthopedic surgeon at Anne Arundel Medical Center in Annapolis who treated Hannah’s injury last April, said that just two weeks ago he treated a 4-year-old boy who had been injured going down the slide with his father.

“This fracture is entirely preventable,” said Dr. Holt, who has created a warning poster for local pediatrician offices and a You Tube video alerting parents to the hazard.

This may be one of those counterintuitive cases when a child is safer by himself. If a foot gets caught while the child is sliding alone, he can just stop moving or twist around until it comes free. But when a child is sitting in an adult lap, the force of the adult’s weight behind him ends up breaking his leg.


The injury is typically treated with a cast from the foot to above the knee; the good news is that no surgery or resetting is needed. The child wears the cast for four to six weeks and heals without any lasting complications.

But the damage is not merely physical. “The parents are always crushed that they broke their kid’s leg and are baffled as to why nobody ever told them this could happen,” Dr. Holt said. “Sometimes one parent is angry at the other parent because that parent caused the child’s fracture. It has some real consequences to families, and I hate to see it happen.”

The Mineola study was done by Dr. John Gaffney, a pediatric orthopedic specialist at Winthrop, after he had treated a rash of playground slide fractures. The hospital’s data indicated that every sliding fracture involved a child younger than 3 riding in an adult’s lap.
The fracture might not be immediately obvious, but typically the child appeared to be in pain and could not put weight on the leg.

Dr. Gaffney said he has treated three playground fractures in the last month for children sliding with a grandparent, a parent and a baby sitter.

“As soon as the weather gets warm, this starts to happen,” he said. “It’s so common, but parents say: ‘How did I not know about this? I thought it was doing something good for my child by having them sit on my lap.’ ”

Andy Dworkin, a former journalist who is now a medical student in Portland, Ore., said his son Felix, then 18 months, was playing with a toddler friend at an elementary school where they were drawn to a blue slide. Felix rode down first, on the lap of his mother, but his rubber-soled shoe caught on the slide and he started to scream when he got off the slide.

Another mother, at the top of the slide with her own 17-month-old, quickly slid down with her son to try to help. But soon that little boy was crying as well. At the emergency room, both boys were found to have fractures, and they were fitted with orange and blue casts.

“I was surprised at how easy it was for a young child to break their leg on a playground,” said Mr. Dworkin, who wrote about the experience for his hometown paper, The Oregonian. “I was even more surprised how nonchalant the hospital staff was about what was happening. They said they see this all the time.”

Both boys had full recoveries. Felix, now 3 ½, doesn’t remember the accident, but will now go down small slides only and remains cautious around large twisting slides, said Mr. Dworkin.

Dr. Holt said he did not want to discourage parents from taking their children to the playground or even playing on slides, but did want to spread the word about the risks of sliding with a child on your lap.

To prevent the injury, the best solution is to allow a child to slide by himself, with supervision and instructions on how to play safely.
Young children can be placed on the slide at the halfway point with a parent standing next to the slide. At the very least, parents should remove a child’s shoes before riding down the slide with the child on their laps, and make sure the child’s legs don’t touch the sides or sliding surface.

“I’m not saying we need to make the entire world out of rubber and insulate kids,” he said. “But this is something that is so totally predictable and preventable. That’s why I want to get the word out this one could go away.”

source: NY times
yooperchild 1st-May-2012 08:26 pm (UTC)
Wow...I have an almost 2 year old and a lot of times, especially on "big" slides, I'll go down with her. This was an interesting read as I had no clue how bad that could be.
thelilyqueen 1st-May-2012 11:09 pm (UTC)
Heh, I was injured as a toddler this way going down a slide with my dad. No broken bones, but I took a fair amount of skin off the top of one of my feet when it got caught under him.

The real kicker? It was during a big family Mother's Day celebration.
squeeful 1st-May-2012 08:35 pm (UTC)
Well, yeah. If you ride down with the toddler and their foot gets caught, instead of just their body weight bearing down on the bone, it's their weight plus YOUR weight, ~30 vs ~200 pounds. Your weight is going to push them onwards, breaking the bone, instead of them slowing down, stopping, or even just bumping the side.
brookiki 1st-May-2012 11:35 pm (UTC)
Yeah, that's one of those things that when you stop to think about it, it makes perfect sense, but that you never really stop to think about.
bnmc2005 1st-May-2012 08:41 pm (UTC)
There's a psychological metaphor in this story.
brewsternorth 2nd-May-2012 01:32 am (UTC)
Helicopter parenting: ur doin it rong?
nyxelestia 2nd-May-2012 11:07 pm (UTC)
Helicopter parenting: not just bad in the long run
angelofdeath275 1st-May-2012 09:28 pm (UTC)
ugh the thought of broken bones makes me queasy....never knew that could happen when the whole point of an adult going down a slide with their kid is to protect them...
darsynia 1st-May-2012 09:40 pm (UTC)
One of my favorite pictures of me and my dad is of the two of us going down a slide! Given how big a guy he was, I'm really glad this never happened to me... I'll definitely keep it in mind!
spiegel11th 1st-May-2012 11:18 pm (UTC)
I'm trying to be more sympathetic (given how easy this would be to prevent by adding signs telling parents not to do this), but this section just baffled me:
Another mother, at the top of the slide with her own 17-month-old, quickly slid down with her son to try to help.
If you had just seen a child hurt, would you do exactly the same thing his mother did, with your own child? Moving to help others is well and good, but as any first aid instructor will tell you, first make sure that you'll be okay, or you're just creating more patients.
brookiki 1st-May-2012 11:39 pm (UTC)
(given how easy this would be to prevent by adding signs telling parents not to do this),

I don't think it would be, at least for some people. I'm constantly hearing the whole "Well, we rode bikes without helmets and never wore seatbelts and so on and we survived" thing from some people I know. I think their reaction to the signs would be "My parents went down the slide with me and I'll go down it with my child because that's just how they should grow up and I refuse to listen to any sign that tells me otherwise"

Sometimes, it seems like some people have this weird rebellious side and are willing to risk their childrens' lives to prove the experts wrong in the face of concrete proof.

Edited because I fail at making sense.

Edited at 2012-05-01 11:41 pm (UTC)
spiegel11th 2nd-May-2012 12:18 am (UTC)
Fair enough. I was going to say something along those lines, tbh, but I was more thinking about how to phrase the second half of my comment.
Yeah, people can be total idiots, but at least it might reduce people going, "Oh but it never occurred to me that an adult going down a toddler's slide might not be the best thing ever!"
And if anyone said the seatbelt thing to me, I'd say, "If my father hadn't been wearing a seatbelt at the time of his accident, he'd have gotten the steering column through his head, rather than just into his face. I think I'll take the extra two seconds effort, thanks."
brookiki 2nd-May-2012 03:10 am (UTC)
Oh, it would definitely do to raise awareness and that would probably prevent a lot of injuries. I just hate the adversarial relationship some people seem to have with warnings.

What makes me so angry with the seatbelt thing is that everyone has that one story where someone they know was in a wreck and the cop/EMT/firefighter at the scene told them that if they'd been wearing a seatbelt, they would have died. Okay, assuming that's true, that's one case vs who knows how many who would have lived if they'd been wearing their seatbelt. Or would have had significantly less injuries because airbags deployed without a seatbelt do very bad things to the human face, thank you very much. Plus, I'm always skeptical because how would they know for sure they would have died and I doubt that someone who routinely cleans up after tragic accidents where someone would have survived would give someone a reason not to wear a seatbelt.

And I worked EMS briefly and I had some coworkers who did some spectacularly reckless and dangerous things, but I never got in an ambulance with someone who didn't buckle their seatbelt, even if we were just driving normally. I think that's telling.
keestone 2nd-May-2012 04:40 pm (UTC)
I have that one story (my dad -- truck hit the driver's side and he was pushed along the bench seat out the passenger side door, and apparently where he'd been sitting was totally crushed), but he never suggested that meant we shouldn't wear seat belts. Because most of the time they are life-savers and that's even before you count in those new-fangled airbags.
mercaque 2nd-May-2012 12:58 am (UTC)
Plus, sometimes it's people getting defensive about their own parents, even when it's really out of proportion to the issue at hand. Like, "how dare you suggest my mom and dad were wrong/negligent/didn't know best."
tabaqui 1st-May-2012 11:40 pm (UTC)
Or you could, you know...put their feet on your legs so they're not touching the slide? It's not like the kid has to be *on the slide* to enjoy it.
tsaraven 1st-May-2012 11:54 pm (UTC)
Toddlers unpredictably flail their legs and arms though, so even if you started off that way it can easily change. My toddler goes on a daily mission to hurt himself already.

tabaqui 2nd-May-2012 01:51 am (UTC)
Sure, and mine did too. I just don't like this kind of underlying 'never ever do this ever, your kid will break their leeeeeeeg!!!' when that's....just not true.

It also irritated me when people said we'd have to get rid of our cats and move half our stuff out when we had a kid, so the house would be 'baby proof'. Yeah, no.
tsaraven 2nd-May-2012 02:08 am (UTC)
I can see how it's also a case of knowing your kid (and if they will listen too). I have been out in public and seen kids, even very young, who can sit still and probably wouldn't try to pry off of a parent's leg on a slide. I have two fidgety dare devils!

homasse 1st-May-2012 11:47 pm (UTC)
I had no idea people go down the slides with their kids - I don't think I've ever seen it. All the times I've seen little kids with parents on slides, the parent is standing BY the slide and holding on to the kid as they go down. So I read this and was like, "Wait, what? Parents even FIT on the slides?" Going down with a kid would have never even occurred to me.
lickety_split 2nd-May-2012 12:00 am (UTC)
Seeing it in action is so unintentionally hilarious because the parent, more often than not, doesn't have any business being on the slide in the first place so you have to painfully watch them scoot themselves slowly down, pulling desperately on the sides. The secondhand embarrassment is excruciating. Like, srsly, this is for 50 lbs and under, what the fuck are you doing up there?
homasse 2nd-May-2012 12:03 am (UTC)
lolol, exactly! It is made for little kids, not big-ass adults! I'd be terrified of geting stuck or breaking it. XD
corinn 2nd-May-2012 04:49 am (UTC)
IIRC, it actually happened at the neighborhood park where I grew up. How an adult thought they could fit down a corkscrew slide some ten-year-olds had trouble with is beyond me. I remember seeing the shattered plastic about halfway up. That had to have been awkward and painful.
chaya 2nd-May-2012 02:36 pm (UTC)
I'm sorry, but LOL.
caketime 2nd-May-2012 02:42 pm (UTC)
Haha, one time my dad forgot to catch my little sister at the end of the slide. He pushed her down 'cause she enjoyed it so much.
LOL I am cackling just thinking about it in slow motion, how can someone be so clueless?! My mum was livid - she finally had some down time (who am I kidding, she was probably cleaning) and then her husband frantically comes home with a simpering toddler and a young 'un going IS SHE OK? MUM, MUM, SHE FELL OFF THE SLIDE, IS SHE OK?

Holding kids as they go down is the best idea. Parents, don't slide with the kids and don't push the kids down the slide and forget to be there to catch them - should go without saying.
patu_paiarehe 1st-May-2012 11:59 pm (UTC)
Meh.

My dad dislocated my elbow when I was two, grabbing me as I fell off some playground equipment. Yeah, it was unfortunate, and I bet it sucked for both of us at the time, but sometimes this stuff just happens.

And especially in this case, when you can bet that for every kid who breaks their leg there's another 100 who have no problems, I don't really see the point in getting too het up about it. Accidents happen, but kids heal fast. Sure, maybe some info would be good but I feel like it's just one more thing in an infinite list of things for mothers to worry about.
mercaque 2nd-May-2012 12:03 am (UTC)
Sure accidents happen, but I don't see the harm in publicizing "hey parents, this particular accident is incredibly preventable."
tabaqui 2nd-May-2012 01:52 am (UTC)
This.
squeeful 2nd-May-2012 08:36 am (UTC)
My younger sister dislocated her elbows and shoulders about two dozen times before she was four. Toddler joints are sproingy. (It was hilarious the time she dislocated both elbows at once in a fit of anger.) However, while a dislocated joint hurts, it's a simple fix. Keeping a toddler in a cast, not so easy.
hellototheworld 2nd-May-2012 03:38 pm (UTC)
But if we assume parents go on the slides with their children to protect them, this bit of info might make them realize it's not actually protecting them at all. 14% of fractures is significant. Why a parent would insist of sliding with their kid KNOWING it's not keeping them safe is beyond me. What's the point?
lickety_split 2nd-May-2012 12:03 am (UTC)
Srsly, we're gonna have an article about slides when clearly it's the SWINGS that are a child death trap? Think of all those kids launching themselves at the top of the arc to somersault across the playground to the applause of an adoring crowd! It's a horrifying tragedy just waiting to happen and here we are acting like the slide is dangerous.

The slide is pretty much the safest thing in the sand as long as your big grown ass isn't fucking on it.

Edited at 2012-05-02 12:05 am (UTC)
etherealtsuki 2nd-May-2012 01:10 am (UTC)
I never heard of that shit. WHAT THE FUCK.

The worst when I was a kid was kids trying to flip the swing over the pole like a fucking pirate ship amusement ride. The P&R of NYC stop that eventually makin the swing impossible to swing up that high. Then people started to dismantle the swings, now there are only baby swings in parks where I live at now.
narwhalhugs 2nd-May-2012 01:44 am (UTC)
Please, swings are no fun at all if you're not going to jump off when you've swung as high as you can go and see how far away you can land.
4eyedblonde 2nd-May-2012 03:09 am (UTC)
I thought this was the sole purpose of swings... Small Child Catapults

(edited because I am half-awake and not coherent at all)

Edited at 2012-05-02 03:11 am (UTC)
brookiki 2nd-May-2012 03:17 am (UTC)
Well, that and trying to swing high enough that you flip over the top. But yeah, no one I knew ever got off a swing by letting it slow down. It was always swing, jump, land. And it was a thing of beauty. Though my poor joints hurt every time I think about those landings now. That and the "Hey, let's see who can jump off the highest thing." Oh, and monkey bars were made for sitting and possibly flipping off of, never walking across. By the time we had the upper body strength to actually swing across them, we were too cool to do it.

And I love your icon.
rosephile 2nd-May-2012 03:31 am (UTC)
I cut my pinkie jumping off a swing in that manner once (on the chain of the swing), I still remember the blood coming out in like a *ribbon*, ewwww.
blunder_buss 2nd-May-2012 05:08 am (UTC)
Hell yes, the swings. I can't tell you how many times I'd be swinging high and some small kid unknowingly wandered straight into my path on my downward swing. No amount of desperate braking could ever stop me from body-slamming that kid across the sand. (Even worse when the parent would get mad at ME for it. How the fuck was that my fault?)
chaya 2nd-May-2012 02:38 pm (UTC)
Those kids are probably dead from traffic by now.
4eyedblonde 2nd-May-2012 07:20 pm (UTC)
It was a good learning experience for those kids
abee 2nd-May-2012 01:38 pm (UTC)
SEZ YOU. The swings were the shit and we always tried to beat each other on how high we can jump off. Yeah, we might end up getting a sprain or a broken bone, but THAT counted as a Badge of Awesome.

Swing-hater. :p
lexiloumarie 2nd-May-2012 04:09 am (UTC)
Weird parenting instincts here. My mother had such a fit when she used to tag along when I'd take the Girl to the park and I'd go down first, and wait for her to follow. She would always insist that it'd be safer if I rode with her. I'd rather pull her off, or catch her climbing off the top if she chickened out. I was always more concerned with the landing than the journey down though.
lastrega 2nd-May-2012 11:10 am (UTC)
I honestly never considered climbing up a slide and sliding down with my kids. I always just kind of assumed if they could get up there they were big enough to slide down. Score one for slacktastic parenting once again.
ar_feiniel_ 2nd-May-2012 12:07 pm (UTC)
Good safety tip.
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