MikeW665 wrote:I think the two biggest issues, are parents that aren't parenting, and a lack of common sense.
CM2772 wrote:Octodog=choke-proof hotdog.
tgoddess wrote:So this really is the solution they jump to, rather than, "Hey, parents...cut up your child's food" or "Pay ATTENTION to what your kid is eating when you feed him."
riddlemay wrote:
Before the invention of chewable aspirin for children, you could have said, "Hey Mr. Parent, why don't you try dissolving a couple of aspirin in a teaspoon of water, instead of subjecting your children to a choking hazard?" But the invention of chewable St. Joseph's Aspirin for Children allowed parents to skip this step. (As did the advent of liquid Tylenol for children later on.)
So I don't think the parents who would welcome a chokeless hot dog for their kids are necessarily lazy, irresponsible or negligent. It might simply solve a problem in a way they'd appreciate.
jlawrence01 wrote:
We ate nuts and hot dogs as toddlers. We drank milkshakes with raw eggs. We drank from the well out of a common dipper. .
tgoddess wrote:So this really is the solution they jump to, rather than, "Hey, parents...cut up your child's food" or "Pay ATTENTION to what your kid is eating when you feed him."
Binko wrote:tgoddess wrote:So this really is the solution they jump to, rather than, "Hey, parents...cut up your child's food" or "Pay ATTENTION to what your kid is eating when you feed him."
Much ado about nothing. There's no slippery slope here, the reason for the advice is stated as ' "No parents can watch all of their kids 100% of the time," Smith says. "The best way to protect kids is to design these risks out of existence." ' So, yeah, they seem to be fully aware of your advice. Nobody's outlawing hot dogs, pediatricians would just like to see a redesign and, frankly, this might be a good way for some intrepid sausage engineers to make a killing. What a great business opportunity.
bnowell724 wrote:Another reason it is unnecessary to create an entirely new product to deal with this issue is that no matter what a kid is eating, whether it's "choke proof" or not, they need to be supervised. Up to a certain age at least. This "no parents can watch kids 100% of the time" business is a flimsy argument.
Binko wrote:bnowell724 wrote:Another reason it is unnecessary to create an entirely new product to deal with this issue is that no matter what a kid is eating, whether it's "choke proof" or not, they need to be supervised. Up to a certain age at least. This "no parents can watch kids 100% of the time" business is a flimsy argument.
It's not necessary. So what? If a parent feels safer buying this so-far-theoretical Better Safer Hot Dog (TM), let the parent decide what they feel is necessary and what isn't. All the report is saying is "Hey, we pediatricians recognize hot dogs are a bit of a choking hazard. Wouldn't it be cool if someone came up with a better, safer hot dog?" I mean, come on, it's not like any agency is coming down and mandating such changes. There's plenty of room in the market for a choke-resistant hot dog, if the market decides it wants one. Nobody is taking your encased meats away from you.
Binko wrote:It's not necessary. So what? If a parent feels safer buying this so-far-theoretical Better Safer Hot Dog (TM), let the parent decide what they feel is necessary and what isn't. All the report is saying is "Hey, we pediatricians recognize hot dogs are a bit of a choking hazard. Wouldn't it be cool if someone came up with a better, safer hot dog?" I mean, come on, it's not like any agency is coming down and mandating such changes. There's plenty of room in the market for a choke-resistant hot dog, if the market decides it wants one. Nobody is taking your encased meats away from you.
tgoddess wrote:FWIW, this topic isn't enraging me as much as it may appear. I just find it amusing that as a species, our luge of common sense keeps careening faster and faster toward the rails. Warning labels on coffee cups...velcro shoes...NUTTY.
riddlemay wrote:tgoddess wrote:FWIW, this topic isn't enraging me as much as it may appear. I just find it amusing that as a species, our luge of common sense keeps careening faster and faster toward the rails. Warning labels on coffee cups...velcro shoes...NUTTY.
Another way of looking at it is that our society, rather than becoming sillier, is becoming more humane. Analogous to our steady progress over the centuries in the realm of human rights (a field in which we still have a long way to go, but in which we've come a long way) is our increasing embrace, in many consumer departments, of the essentially moral position that "I am my brother's keeper." I know a lot of people find this intrusive--"get your hands off me, you're not my keeper"--and that's one valid way of reacting to the trend, but another valid response is to say that a society that cares about people getting sick or injured, and does what it can to make it happen less, is a good one.
riddlemay wrote:tgoddess wrote:FWIW, this topic isn't enraging me as much as it may appear. I just find it amusing that as a species, our luge of common sense keeps careening faster and faster toward the rails. Warning labels on coffee cups...velcro shoes...NUTTY.
Another way of looking at it is that our society, rather than becoming sillier, is becoming more humane. Analogous to our steady progress over the centuries in the realm of human rights (a field in which we still have a long way to go, but in which we've come a long way) is our increasing embrace, in many consumer departments, of the essentially moral position that "I am my brother's keeper." I know a lot of people find this intrusive--"get your hands off me, you're not my keeper"--and that's one valid way of reacting to the trend, but another valid response is to say that a society that cares about people getting sick or injured, and does what it can to make it happen less, is a good one.
Dmnkly wrote:Which is all fine and good except when anything that kills or injures a handful of people every year requires an industry resolution, media blitz, legislation, extensive labeling and research dollars. Just as any parent can become overprotective and smothering, so can society. If it were just hot dogs, it wouldn't be a big deal. But it isn't. It's everything. And since the threshold for massive undertaking is so low, and accidental deaths and injuries will never be eliminated, there's no theoretical end to it. So it becomes a matter of which infinitesimal danger will we target this week to spend millions of dollars and man-hours to possibly prevent. Meanwhile, if pediatricians put those conference hours into free treatment for uninsured families and hot dog manufacturers put those research dollars and man hours into simply sending hot dogs to starving nations, we'd save a whole lot more than 13 kids every year.
I'm kind of conflating two points here, but I think they're both valid.
The policy statement called for the government to establish a "mandatory system . . . to label foods with appropriate warnings according to their choking risk, to conduct detailed surveillance and investigate food-related choking incidents, and to warn the public about emerging food-related choking hazards."
RevrendAndy wrote:If this debate gets any more important, I believe the administration will spend billions to start the Bureau to Understand the Redevelopment of Safe Sausages(BUNS for short). There will be a hot dog czar. Might as well socialize the encased meat industry.
Binko wrote:tgoddess - I don't really disagree with your position in that of course it's up to the parents to watch what their kids put in their mouths and make sure they don't choke on anything. Personally, and I'm NOT a parent, I had no idea hot dogs (and apparently grapes, as I read elsewhere) were such choking hazards to kids. I simply don't think what the agency is doing here is extreme or leading down some slippery slope to outlawing hot dogs (or wherever it is people think this slippery slope is leading.)
SMT wrote:
Maybe this is a nitpick, but I think it should be pointed out that quite often (especially these days when it is more common than not for both parents to work outside the home) the person feeding a small child is not always going to be the parent. It's not that much of a logical leap that a caregiver may not be as attuned to potential choking hazard as a parent, so these kinds of warnings really are necessary. I personally rely on my well-meaning but clueless parents to watch my kids from time to time, and I've been pretty shocked at how it simply doesn't occur to them that giving grapes or hotdogs to a 1 year old might be a problem. Ditto for the sweet and otherwise attentive 16 year old neighbor girl who babysits my kids, and even for several of the nannies and daycare providers I know who are employed by friends of mine.
hoppy2468 wrote:There is an easy and obvious solution. It's called the gene pool. If they don't choke on a dog, chances are they'll stick a fork in an outlet. Let nature take it's course.
Mhays wrote:Bill Dailey just posted this elsewhere. I like the "hot dog bites" idea...hmmm....
later - on pg 3 of the thread, Mhays wrote:Are those Hot Dogs a la Rose, Sazerac?
We aren't jumping it too far, though-- this is exactly where legislation/regulation comes from, all these initialed groups with Washington lobbyists.