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Feds warn against bed rails, citing 18 deaths since 2021
The U.S. Consumer Product Safety Commission on Thursday issued an urgent warning about portable adult bed rails, saying the devices are behind the suffocation deaths of 18 people since 2021.
The agency’s safety alert coincided with the ninth recall of portable bed rails in three years. Medical King of Brooklyn, New York, is recalling about 220,000 adult portable bed rails due to entrapment and asphyxia risks. The recall follows the death of a 66-year-old man who became trapped between a mattress and a bed rail in November at a residential care facility in South Carolina.
The recall involves three models of Medical King Bed Assist Rail with Adjustable Heights (model numbers 7007 and 7057) and the Bed Assist Rail Without Legs (model number 7037). The recalled rails sold online for about $40 on Amazon.com, eBay, Kohls.com, medicalkingusa.com and Target Plus from January 2020 through March 2024.
People who purchased the products, which are made in China, should stop using them and contact Medical King for a repair kit or replacement bed rail, depending on the model.
Medical King can be reached at 888-334-1142 from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. ET, Monday through Friday. To register for a repair kit, go to https://medicalkingusa.com/products/recalls or https://medicalkingusa.com and click on “Register Here.”
The recall is the ninth issued by the CPSC in the last three years. The recalls and two product warnings impacted more than 3 million units and are associated with serious injuries from head, neck or chest entrapment and 18 deaths, the federal agency stated.
CPSC data shows that 92% of fatalities associated with adult portable bed rails are from entrapment, usually of the head or neck.
The agency issued new mandatory safety standards for adult portable bed rails in January 2023.
Often purchased for sick or frail older people, the side rails or metal bars are used on hospital beds and in home care with the idea of helping patients pull themselves up or to keep them from falling out of bed. But these products — which are marketed as safety devices and sold by retailers including Amazon and Walmart, as well as by medical supply stores — have shown to be unsafe for many, with thousands of elderly and disabled patients injured by them.
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Human composting offers an environmentally friendly alternative to burial and cremation. Here’s how it works.
Most people plan to either be buried or cremated when they die, but there is another, environmentally friendly option: Human composting.
“So instead of being cremated and turned into ash, you’re getting gently transformed into soil,” Tom Harries, CEO and founder of Earth Funeral, explained Thursday on “CBS Mornings Plus.”
Harries described it as an “accelerated natural process” that takes about 30 days with the help of science and technology.
“You get left with soil at the end, and that’s the really neat part is what you do with the soil,” he said. “You can keep it, you can scatter it, you can plant it, and a lot of families donate the soil as well.”
Donated soil has been sent to conservation projects where it’s been used for reforestation, ecosystem restoration and wildfire restoration.
How human composting originated
The process was first legalized in Washington state in 2020. Since then, 11 other states have adopted the method. Those states are: Oregon, California, Nevada, Arizona, Colorado, Minnesota, Vermont, New York, Maine, Maryland and Delaware.
“It’s labeled as a new process, but this is as old as the first living organisms,” Harries said. “This is what happens to any living organism when it dies, but we’re accelerating it as I say through science and technology, so it’s a completely natural process.”
The base cost of a “soil transformation package,” according to the Earth Funeral website, is about $5,000.
Harries, who has started three companies in the industry, came across the process in 2020. For him, it’s personal.
“The company prior to Earth was an online cremation company … and the thing I really realized is, I just didn’t want to be cremated. It’s a pollutive process. It’s hard to be excited by the concept of getting cremated … I wanted it for me and I therefore wanted to bring it to others, too.”
He said he sees the eco-friendly option becoming more popular in the future.
“Death is obviously deeply personal, a lot of considerations, religion is one of them. There’s been a little bit of opposition, but I think it’s a new concept. It will gain greater acceptance in mainstream culture at the time.”