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Safety & Prevention

Childproofing Home Exercise Equipment

By: Christine Pagano MD, FAAP

Staying home more during the COVID-19 pandemic made it more challenging for families to get needed exercise. Avoiding public spaces like gyms to limit exposure to the virus, some invested in fitness equipment to use at home. Sales of items such as treadmills and stationary bicycles, for example, have soared.

Working out at home can be a good way to stay fit during the pandemic and when the weather keeps you inside. But it's important to keep young children safe around home gym equipment. Treadmills, ellipticals, rowing machines, and stationary bikes are big machines that pose big dangers to little kids. They can be sources of serious injuries and even death for little ones. According to the National Electronic Injury Surveillance System, there were nearly 21,000 children treated in emergency departments nationwide for injuries from home exercise equipment in 2019 alone.

How babies & young children can get hurt

These unintentional injuries can often be severe. Little hands that get caught under the moving belt of a treadmill or the rotating parts of a stationary bicycle can suffer from scrapes, friction burns, and even finger amputations. Falls from these moving machines can lead to head trauma, concussions, and broken bones.

Children have also been entrapped, pinned, and pulled under the equipment's rollers.  The Consumer Product Safety Commission (CPSC) has recalled​ a popular-brand treadmill after dozens of these injuries, one fatal. It shared a disturbing video showing how one child was injured.​

​In addition to the equipment itself, power and heart rate monitor cords can pose a strangulation risk, one that famously resulted in the tragic death of boxer Mike Tyson's four-year-old daughter in 2009. Finally, weights accidentally dropped on small bodies can result in broken bones, internal organ damage, suffocation, and possibly death.

Take steps to help prevent injuries

Parents should consider the home exercise area as a place to keep childproofed through the toddler years and beyond. Key considerations to ensure children's safety include:

  • Young children need to be supervised at all times around home gym equipment. Exercise machines should not be set up in areas where children regularly play, such as the basement.

  • Treadmills, stationary bikes, and other workout machines should be unplugged when not in use.

  • Many exercise machines require a safety key in order to operate. When not in use, remove the safety key from the machine and keep it in a separate, secure location.

  • Consider installing a lock on the workout room itself, if possible.

More Information

​​About Dr. ​​Pagano

Dr. Christine Pagano MD, FAAP, a p​​rimary care pediatrician in Northern New Jersey, is a member of the American Academy of Pediatrics Council on Early Childhood.​


Last Updated
5/6/2021
Source
American Academy of Pediatrics (Copyright © 2021)
The information contained on this Web site should not be used as a substitute for the medical care and advice of your pediatrician. There may be variations in treatment that your pediatrician may recommend based on individual facts and circumstances.
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