AirTag Safety Nightmare: Family's Disney Trip Turns Terrifying as Device Nearly Kills Daughter

Published 3 months ago3 minute read
Precious Eseaye
Precious Eseaye
AirTag Safety Nightmare: Family's Disney Trip Turns Terrifying as Device Nearly Kills Daughter

What began as a measure to enhance child safety for a family trip to Disneyland ironically led to a harrowing experience when a four-year-old daughter ingested a button battery from an Apple AirTag. Lisa Marie, a mother living in Vancouver Island, Canada, with her husband Markus, 48, had purchased four AirTags to track her children at the bustling Anaheim, California, theme park. However, after the devices malfunctioned during the April holiday, she stored them in her car's glovebox with intentions of getting them repaired.

On May 23, the family's world was turned upside down when Lily Grace, aged four, made a 'gulping sound' from the back of the car. Lisa Marie, immediately suspecting the worst despite Lily's initial claim of swallowing a 'quarter,' realized her greatest fear had materialized: her daughter had swallowed a button battery. The coin-sized battery, extracted from one of the broken AirTags, was a terrifying discovery.

Lily Grace was swiftly rushed to the hospital, where an x-ray confirmed the battery had already reached her bowel. The family endured an agonizing four-day wait, filled with immense stress and fear, as they hoped for the battery to pass naturally. Lisa Marie vividly recounted her emotional distress in the hospital, fearing internal damage to her daughter. Her husband, Markus, even prepared for surgery, though it proved unnecessary as the battery was already in the bowels and moving.

During this period, Lisa Marie desperately tried various methods to help the battery pass, including giving Lily laxatives, using trampolines and vibration plates, and feeding her prunes. The ordeal took a significant emotional toll on the entire family, with Lily's three siblings expressing fears that she might die. Button batteries pose extreme dangers; they can cause severe damage to the lining of a child's oesophagus or bowel, potentially burning through the tissue and creating holes. A tragic case in 2020 saw two-year-old Johnathan Huff die after swallowing remote control batteries that burned through his internal organs.

Thankfully, Lily Grace passed the battery naturally after four days and was left with no lasting side effects. This outcome, however, did not diminish the emotional scars of the incident. The mother, who had repeatedly warned her children about the dangers of button batteries for years, highlighted the profound irony of a device bought for safety being the source of such peril.

Now, Lisa Marie is issuing a fervent plea to other parents: to 'throw away' any items containing button batteries. She explained the challenge of this, as such items often enter the home as gifts. She stresses the importance of constant vigilance and education, stating, "Just know that you're never safe - be over cautious." This terrifying experience serves as a stark reminder of the hidden dangers of everyday items and the critical need for extreme caution when children are present.

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