Slightly-high-heel injury epidemic

heely.jpgThe journal Injury alerts us to another new health menace of high-heeled shoes:

Heely Injuries: A New Epidemic Warranting a Government Health Warning!” B. Lenehan, O. Callender, A. McIntyre, S. Boran, D. Moore, E. Fogarta and F. Dowling, Injury, January 17, 2007 [Epublication ahead of print publication]. The authors, who are at variously at the National Children’s Hospital, Tallaght, Dublin and at Our Lady’s Children’s Hospital, Crumlin, Dublin, Ireland, explain:

Heelys, the new craze gripping the nation, were first introduced to Ireland in 2005 having been available in the United States since 2000. Designed as “the only shoe with a removable wheel in the sole” and initially marketed among rollerbladers and skateboarders they have been adopted by children as contemporary footwear.

MATERIAL AND METHODS: From April to June 2006, all patients presenting to trauma orthopaedic services at our institutions with injuries sustained while wearing Heelys were included in this study. RESULTS: Thirty-nine patients are included in this study. The mean age was 9.1 years (range 7-13, median 9 years). Of the 39 patients referred to the orthopaedic service, 8 required admissions to hospital. One patient admitted following a head injury, required craniotomy and evacuation of an extradural haematoma.

CONCLUSION: The significance of the injuries encountered demonstrates the potentially devastating results from the use of Heelys. The public perception of safety is incorrect and manufacturers rightly recommend strongly the use of safety gear.