CPSC Warning: Freezer, Dryer, Cooler and Refrigerator Entrapment Deaths to Children

Consumer Product Safety Commission


CPSC Warning: Freezer, Dryer, Cooler and Refrigerator Entrapment Deaths to Children

CPSC Document #5073

The U.S. Consumer Product Safety Commission (CPSC) has received reports of numerous suffocation deaths involving children who crawled inside latch type freezers, clothes dryers, combination washer/dryer units, picnic coolers, ice boxes in campers, and old-style latch type refrigerators. Most of the victims were four to seven years old. In all cases, the doors could not be easily pushed open from the inside. In some of the incidents associated with clothes dryers, the appliance was accidentally turned on while the child was inside.

Frequently, the children were playing "hide-and-seek" and the appliance or chest provided a deceptively good place to hide. When the door slammed shut, the tight fitting gasket on most of the appliances cut off air to the child. This, along with the insulated construction of the appliance, also prevented the child’s screams from being heard. But abandoned appliances are not the only items involved with accidents like these. Entrapment deaths have been reported in products in use or stored in the kitchen, laundry room, basement, or garage. Deaths also have occurred in ice boxes located in campers parked outside the home.

For the past forty years, the Federal Refrigerator Safety Act has required that refrigerators be capable of being opened from the inside. Since then, manufacturers of various other appliances have voluntarily redesigned their products to provide safety doors or interlock devices that help prevent entrapment accidents. However, there are still some appliances in the home that do not have these safety features.

The CPSC recommends that you identify appliances or ice chests in your house, garage or recreational
vehicles, which may present an entrapment hazard, and:

  • Childproof old-style refrigerators and other appliances which are to be discarded or are in storage. The surest method is to take off the door completely and in most cases this is a simple process using a screwdriver. (It is unlawful in many local jurisdictions to discard old refrigerators without first removing the door.) If the door will not come off, remove or disable the latch completely so the door will no longer lock when closed. A third alternative is to fasten the door shut so it cannot be opened. (A chain and padlock can be used if the chain can be secured through the handles so it will not slide off. Strong filament tape wrapped around the appliance several times may be used temporarily. However, tape may deteriorate over time and need replacement.)

  • Keep children away from old-style refrigerators, freezers, dryers or coolers still in use. Lock the door to your utility room and warn children not to play inside these appliances.

  • If a child is missing, these appliances and picnic coolers should be among the first places checked. A few minutes may save the child’s life.

To report an unsafe product or a product related injury, consumers may call the U.S. Consumer Product Safety Commission’s tollfree hotline number, 1-800-638-2772. The teletypewriter number for the hearing impaired is 1-800-638-8270.
Appliances and Cookers Can Be Entrapment Hazards


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