AirTag Nightmare: Disney Trip Turns Terrifying as Tracking Device Nearly Kills Child

What began as a proactive measure to ensure child safety during a family trip to Disneyland ironically led to a harrowing experience for a mother and her family. Lisa Marie purchased four Apple AirTags with the intention of tracking her children at the bustling theme park. However, after the devices malfunctioned during their holiday in Anaheim, California, the mum-of-four stored them in her car's glovebox, intending to get them repaired. This seemingly innocuous act set the stage for a terrifying incident.
On May 23, while in the car, Lisa Marie's four-year-old daughter, Lily Grace, made a distinctive 'gulping sound' and announced she had swallowed something. To her horror, Lisa realized Lily had ingested a button battery, likely from one of the broken AirTags that had been stored away. The family, originally from the US but now residing in Vancouver Island, Canada, immediately rushed Lily to the hospital.
An x-ray scan at the hospital confirmed their worst fears: a coin-sized button battery had already reached Lily's bowel. Button batteries are notoriously dangerous when swallowed, capable of causing severe damage to the lining of the oesophagus or bowel, and in some tragic cases, burning completely through to create a hole. The article recalls the tragic death of two-year-old Johnathan Huff in 2020, who died after swallowing remote control batteries that burned through his internal organs.
The family faced an agonizing four-day wait for the battery to pass naturally. Lisa Marie described the emotional toll, fearing for her daughter's life and crying on the hospital floor, convinced Lily's insides were 'burned out'. Her husband, Markus, 48, even prepared for surgery, though it wasn't required as the battery was already in the bowels and moving. Back home, Lisa tried various methods, including laxatives, trampolines, and prunes, to aid its passage. Thankfully, after four days, the battery was passed without any lasting side effects for Lily.
Lisa Marie shared the 'irony' of the situation, noting her longstanding fear of children swallowing button batteries, a danger she had repeatedly warned her own children about, with the latest warning just two weeks prior to the incident. The very devices she bought for safety ended up causing harm. Now, as a stay-at-home mum, Lisa is urgently appealing to other parents to 'throw away' any items containing button batteries. She highlights the challenge of gifts containing such batteries entering the home and emphasizes the need for constant vigilance and education, stating,
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