
One of the most common emergency room visits are for children with peanut allergies who ingested something with peanuts in it, Michiels said. Remain vigilant about allergies, especially for kids.As marijuana-related edibles become more commonplace, keep in mind that they can accidentally distributed or mistaken for regular brownies and cookies, Lynch said.Doing so is a "perfect setup for catastrophe," Kaufmann said. People often put themselves at risk for hypothermia on Halloween, he added.

Rahul Sharma, emergency physician-in-chief at NewYork-Presbyterian/Weill Cornell Medical Center. Pay attention to the weather, and dress appropriately, said Dr.Use safer alternatives to candles like flash lights and glow sticks. Inspect your candy, but the biggest danger comes from choking. Take caution of cars while trick-or-treating in the dark. Beware of costumes that impair your field of vision, constrict breathing, or prevent your arms and legs from functioning normally. Don't let children handle knives when carving pumpkins. Keep the five Cs in mind: carving, costumes, cars, candy and candles.Doctor recommended safety tips for Halloween The part that gave him away: he didn't know the words to the song, Lynch said. "I think he actually believed he was one of the original members. "Every five minutes he would break out in song - all Temptations," Lynch said of the man, whom he described as being in his late 50s. The man showed up to the hospital dressed in a old 1950s or 1960s-style suit and determined that it was the perfect time to entertain his fellow patients, Lynch said. One patient - who also ended up in the emergency room due to an injury he received while intoxicated - had convinced himself that he was one of the original members of The Temptations. The fake "original member" of the Temptations Due to a zipper malfunction, hospital staff were forced to cut the costume off "in order to fully expose the patient and institute appropriate cooling measures," Glatter said. The patient probably was not able to reuse his costume. Several years ago, Glatter said he cared for one patient who arrived in a tight-fitting bear costume and was having difficulty breathing.Įarlier that day, the patient had taken ecstasy, which rose his core body temperature to a whopping 106 degrees, Glatter said. "Fortunately, because was fake, it didn't penetrate him," Lynch said. The patient's injuries were limited to "a lot of bruises." "He was, ironically, dressed up as a pirate," Lynch said. The 22-year-old man had just come from a bar featuring a costume dress-up night event, where he "got beat up" with a plastic sword, Lynch said.
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".On the plus side, she did not charge us for her services." "It was clear that she was not, based on her attire," he added.

While her injuries were minor, doctors and nurses had to essentially babysit the patient, as she kept running out of her room, approaching patients with her fake stethoscope and pretending to be an actual nurse, Lynch said.Įvery 20 or 30 minutes, hospital staff would escort the errant fake nurse back to her room, but she would somehow find a way to run up to another patient to introduce herself as their caretaker, Lynch said. She had gone out to a bar to celebrate, but by the time she got to the emergency room, she'd broken one of her heels, her makeup was running, and there was a distinct run in her panty hoes. The woman - who was wearing a nurse costume - was being treated for injuries she received from falling while intoxicated, Lynch said. One year, Lynch treated a woman in her early 20s who took her Halloween alter ego a little too seriously. Michael Lynch, a toxicologist and an emergency physician at the University of Pittsburgh Medical Center, told ABC News. Most of the people seeking treating arrive "in some sort of costume," ranging from everything from the silly to the scary, antique and scantily clad, Dr. The Halloween festivities fill the emergency room with a plethora of characters. Sometimes, the accidents don't even happen on the holiday itself, but rather the holiday-designated weekend, when inebriated adults act worse than the children and get themselves hurt in the process, doctors said.Įmergency room physicians regaled stories to ABC News on their most memorable Halloween mishaps: Most patients arrive to the hospital in "some sort of costume" Robert Glatter, an emergency physician at Lenox Hill Hospital in New York City, told ABC News. The majority of cases emergency room physicians see on Halloween are alcohol or drug intoxication and trauma, Dr. - The scariest place on Halloween isn't a cemetery or haunted house - it's the emergency room.
