fireworks
Image via Jingda Chen/Unsplash

In addition to patriotic parades and neighborhood cookouts, Americans celebrate the Fourth of July with firework displays. While many communities stage their own shows, families may indulge in setting off fireworks. The goal is to do it safely and not have the results recorded in 2023: 9,700 injuries and 8 deaths counted in local emergency rooms.

The Consumer Product Safety Commission (CPSC) issued the following 5 guidelines for safe fireworks usage on the Fourth of July:

  1. Never allow children to play with or set off fireworks
  2. Make sure fireworks are legal in your area
  3. Keep a bucket of water and garden hose available
  4. Ignite fireworks one at a time and back up quickly
  5. Never use fireworks if impaired by alcohol or drugs

The most commonly-injured body parts are in descending order: hands and fingers; the head, face and ears; eyes; the trunk; and legs. While kids love to play with sparklers, please be aware they can reach a temperature of 2,000 degrees Fahrenheit. According to CPSC, almost half the injuries treated in emergency rooms are related to burns.

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