This Season's Grapes Are A 'Choking Hazard' For Toddlers, Says Paediatrician
This season's australian grapes are a 'choking hazard' according to a leading Australian paediatrician. Find out more information here.
Parents with young children, the next time you go to the supermarket skip purchasing this season’s Australian grapes.
According to Australian paediatrician Dr. Luke Sammartino, these grapes have increasingly started to cause choking in toddlers because of how they are bigger than usual this season.
Dr Sammartino gave this warning to parents after seeing a dramatic rise in the number of fruit-caused choking cases in toddlers.
In an interview with Australian daily newspaper, the Herald Sun, Dr Sammartino said, “We are seeing grapes this season that are particularly big. This can present a choking hazard and there have been cases where children have swallowed a whole grape and it has become stuck in their throats.”
This is not the first time grapes have posed a threat to toddlers.
In 2017, a 5-year-old boy from Brisbane was rushed to the hospital after swallowing a whole grape.
Fortunately, he was saved after going through an operation under general anaesthesia.
‘As a paediatrician who consults with hundreds of families every year, I have seen and heard it all and an incident like this is obviously incredibly distressing for parents and constitutes an emergency situation requiring immediate attention,’ Dr Sammartino added.
This season’s grapes are ‘very mature’
The Australian Table Grape Association’s Chief Executive Jeff Scott commented that this season’s grapes are of a larger size because of a dry winter with cold nights, sunny days and minimal rainfall.
As a result of this and the ongoing drought, the grapes have become ‘very mature’.
Common fruits and vegetables that cause choking
Besides, grapes other fruits and vegetables also cause choking
- Cherry tomato
- Melon balls
- Baby carrot
- Berries
- Canned fruit pieces
- Green beans
- Celery
For parents who choose to feed their toddler these foods, do cut them into smaller pieces to make it easier for toddlers to swallow.
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