PDA

JOIN THE FORUM LOUNGE!

By Joining The Forum Lounge you will be able to see the pictures in this thread and post a reply. Also, after 25 posts you'll be able to see the hidden forums as well!

It's free and all of your information is confidential.

Click here to begin interacting!
Click here to register

Join in on this Discussion and see the pictures. Click here-> : Heavy toilet seats can be a danger to little boys


BATMAN
12-28-2008, 02:55 PM
Parents of newly toilet-trained boys should take a few simple steps to keep their sons' penises safe when they go to the bathroom, a team of UK urologists advises.

There's evidence that crush injuries due to falling toilet seats may be on the rise, Dr. Joe Philip of Leighton Hospital in Crewe in England and colleagues warn in a letter in BJU (British Journal of Urology) International.

While he and his colleagues typically see just one or two such cases a year, if any, Philip told Reuters Health, they treated four different 2- to 4-year-old boys with penile crush injuries in the past several months.

"Thankfully all of the four had only the foreskin swelling, but obviously there's a lot of anxiety for the parents and the kids," Philip said. All of the boys were kept in the hospital overnight until they were able to urinate, but none of them suffered lasting physical damage, he added.

In each case, the youngster was trying to urinate on his own and had lifted the toilet seat, only to have it fall back down. An industry report states that wooden toilet seats are becoming more popular as a possible explanation for the increase in injuries.

Philip and his colleagues offer the following tips to help families of young boys prevent these injuries from happening:

Install "soft fall" toilet seats in every bathroom in the home, and ban heavy toilet seats made of wood or ceramic from homes with young boys.
Leave the toilet seat up at all times, until all of the boys in the household can hold the seat up on their own.
Supervise children every time they visit the bathroom.
Constant supervision can be difficult, Philip conceded, especially during holiday gatherings when a youngster may steal off on his own to demonstrate his newly-found skill. "Children want to show that they are independent," he said.

rodney87
12-28-2008, 04:51 PM
great, one more thing for overprotective parents to worry about. Now they'll be buying child safe toilets.

Misty Rayne
12-28-2008, 04:54 PM
:rofl: my Bear is toilet trained and he knows how to put the damn seat up without having it fall on his dick

Turbo II Rotor
12-28-2008, 06:06 PM
My toilet seat has the little 3/4in spacers on the bottom. It creates a gap between the bowl and lid when it's down.

Steel
12-28-2008, 06:34 PM
"...and ban..."

Ah, the great european problem solving strategy.

oakback
12-29-2008, 07:54 AM
We have the toilet seats like the ones you see in public bathrooms, where there's a gap at the front (not a full circle/oval). Problem solved!

...ceramic...

Leave the toilet seat up at all times, until they can hold the seat up on their own.

Are toilets different in the UK? I've never seen a ceramic toilet seat (seems like it would be easily broken, too), and do they have to hold the seat up while they pee? My son has never had a problem lifting the seat, and I've never heard of any other kids having this problem.

SexyFirstLady
12-29-2008, 08:20 AM
maybe someone should inform them the toilet seat comes back down AFTER you piss

wotnartd
12-29-2008, 12:31 PM
Why should you have to hold the seat up? What the fuck?

If a seat falls and I'm pissing, someone will have to mop up my piss, and it won't be me.

Animal
12-29-2008, 08:53 PM
L-O-Fucking-L.

JOIN THE FORUM LOUNGE!

By Joining The Forum Lounge you will be able to see the pictures in this thread and post a reply. Also, after 25 posts you'll be able to see the hidden forums as well!

It's free and all of your information is confidential.

Click here to begin interacting!
Click here to register