
Serving
Eastern Iowa and Western Illinois
Children
Can Strangle in Window Covering
Cords
In cooperation with the U.S.
Consumer Product Safety Commission
(CPSC), the Window Covering
Safety Council (WCSC) announced
recalls to repair horizontal
window blinds to prevent the
risk of strangulation to young
children. The recalls involved
millions of window blinds
with pull cords and inner
cords that can form a loop
and cause strangulation.
From 1991 to 2000, CPSC received
reports of 160 strangulations
involving cords on window
blinds: 140 strangulations
involved the outer pull cords,
and 20 involved the inner
cords that run through the
blind slats.
In 1994, CPSC worked with
the window covering industry
to redesign new window blinds
to eliminate the outer loop
on the end of the pull cords
and provide free repair kits
so consumers could fix their
existing blinds. Window blinds
sold since 1995 no longer
have pull cords ending in
loops.
In 1999, CPSC began a new
investigation of window blind
deaths. In an extensive review
of incidents, CPSC found that
children could also become
entangled in the inner cords
that are used to raise the
slats of blinds. These entrapments
occur when a young child pulls
on an inner cord and it forms
a loop that a child can hang
in. All of these deaths involved
children in cribs or playpens
placed next to windows. In
most cases, the outer pull
cords were placed out of reach,
but the children still strangled
when they pulled on the inner
cords of the blinds. The strangulation
victims ranged in age from
9 months to 17 months.
As a result of the CPSC investigation,
the industry has further redesigned
window blinds. Window blinds
sold since November 2000 have
attachments on the pull cords
so that the inner cords can’t
form a loop if pulled by a
young child. Consumers with
blinds bought before Nov.
2000 should repair them.
Consumers who have window
blinds with loops should immediately
visit WCSC (windowcoverings.org/cgi-bin/forms/forms.cgi?form=4)
or call 800-506-4636 to receive
a free repair kit for each
set of blinds. The repair
kit includes small plastic
attachments to prevent inner
cords from being pulled loose.
Instructions for cord stop
installation (windowcoverings.org/howtorepair.html)
are easy and repair can be
done in minutes without removing
blinds.
The kit also includes safety
tassels for pre- 1995 window
blinds with outer pull cords
ending in loops. Consumers
should cut the loops and install
the safety tassel at the end
of each pull cord (left illustration).
Consumers who have vertical
blinds, draperies or pleated
shades with continuous loop
cords can also order from
the same toll-free number
a special tiedown to prevent
strangulation in those window
coverings (right illustration)
Parents should keep window
covering cords and chains
permanently out of the reach
of children. Never place a
child’s crib or playpen within
reach of a window blind. Unless
the cords can be completely
removed from the child’s reach,
including when the child climbs
on furniture, CPSC recommends
against knotting or tying
the cords together because
this creates a new loop in
which a child could become
entangled.