Consumers should immediately stop using this magnetic game due to ingestion risks, agency warns

The Consumer Product and Safety Commission says people should immediately throw out a magnetic game because it poses serious ingestion for children

ByThe Associated Press

August 29, 2024, 11:25 AM

NEW YORK — The Consumer Product and Safety Commission is warning people to immediately dispose of a magnetic game because it poses serious ingestion risks for children.

The CPSC posted a warning Thursday that “Magnetic Chess Games” sold by China-based seller JOMO contain magnets that do not comply with U.S. federal safety regulations. As a result, the “loose, hazardous magnets pose a risk of serious injury or death,” according to the warning.

The CPSC said it issued a violation notice to JOMO, but that the company has not agreed to recall its Magnetic Chess Games or provide a remedy. The commission urged people to stop using the game and throw it away immediately.

The games were sold online at walmart.com in a blue box with the word “Magnetic” on the front and back, according to the CPSC. They include about 20 loose black magnets but not chess-shaped pieces, despite its marketing.

It’s unclear when or how long these games were sold. A CPSC spokesperson said the commission could not provide further information since JOMO is not cooperating.

A Walmart spokesperson said customers’ health and safety are the company’s top priority and that it began working to remove the games soon after the CPSC warning was issued Thursday.

Experts have long noted the serious health hazards tied to swallowing magnets, with children particularly at risk. When high-powered magnets are ingested, the CPSC noted, they can attract each other or another metal object in the body and become lodged in the digestive system — potentially resulting in blockage, infection, blood poisoning or death.

Overall, the CPSC estimates a total of 2,400 magnet ingestions were treated in hospitals annually between 2017 and 2021. The commission said it is aware of eight related deaths from 2005 through 2021, two of which were outside the U.S.

Read More

  • Related Posts

    What consumers can expect from import taxes as the US sets new tariff rates

    This page either does not exist or is currently unavailable. From here you can either hit the “back” button on your browser to return to the previous page, or visit…

    US consumers cut spending in January more drastically than at any point in the last four years

    This page either does not exist or is currently unavailable. From here you can either hit the “back” button on your browser to return to the previous page, or visit…

    You Missed

    Lucy Letby ‘used as scapegoat for failings of senior doctors’ according to her childhood friend

    Lucy Letby ‘used as scapegoat for failings of senior doctors’ according to her childhood friend

    Distraught woman admits to using ‘homeless man’ from viral AI prank to file fake sex abuse report

    Distraught woman admits to using ‘homeless man’ from viral AI prank to file fake sex abuse report

    Reform UK gets first House of Lords member as Tory donor jumps ship

    Reform UK gets first House of Lords member as Tory donor jumps ship

    ‘See me one more time before I die’: Thomas Markle issues desperate plea to Meghan from hospital bed  

    ‘See me one more time before I die’: Thomas Markle issues desperate plea to Meghan from hospital bed  

    ‘I don’t want to die estranged from Meghan. I want to meet my grandkids and Harry’: Thomas Markle speaks to the Mail’s CAROLINE GRAHAM from his hospital bed in this world exclusive interview

    ‘I don’t want to die estranged from Meghan. I want to meet my grandkids and Harry’: Thomas Markle speaks to the Mail’s CAROLINE GRAHAM from his hospital bed in this world exclusive interview

    Multiple homes DESTROYED as out-of-control bushfires wreaks havoc on suburbs north of Sydney

    Multiple homes DESTROYED as out-of-control bushfires wreaks havoc on suburbs north of Sydney