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Study Finds Paintball Injuries on Rise

Baca Loco

Ex-Fun Police
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News Break
01/05/2004 07:37:14 EST Study Finds Paintball Injuries on Rise

Injuries to adults and children playing paintball have tripled in recent years, including eye damage causing lasting vision loss, a study found.

From 1997 to 2000, paintball-related injuries nationwide climbed from 926 to 2,780, with up to a third occurring in children younger than 15, according to the study, which analyzed injury data from the U.S. Consumer Product Safety Commission.

In 1999 alone, there were 519 eye injuries among 779 total paintball-related injuries to children under 15. Bleeding and retina detachment were among the most common eye injuries.

Many injuries occur because players are not wearing goggles or face masks, said researcher Dr. David Listman of St. Barnabas Hospital in New York.

Doctors should be aware of the dangers and lobby for restrictions in paintball equipment sales to minors, Listman said.

His study appears in January's Pediatrics, published Monday.

Paintball is a battle game in which players shoot at each other using compressed-gas guns filled with marble-size paint capsules.

The game is played at organized paintball centers, which usually provide and require face masks, Listman said. But children often play without protective equipment in woods, back yards or even basements, he said.

Tim Richmond of the Paintball Business Association, which provides insurance for paintball fields and services for about 400 accounts, said the Greenville, S.C.-based group's safety requirements include goggles or full face masks.

In 1999, an estimated 8 million people played paintball at more than 2,500 sites, Listman said.

Copyright 2004 Associated Press. All rights reserved.
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McD

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Feb 27, 2003
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Wonder if the escilation relates to the increase in players ????

or a desire to be like pj from "bika grove like man" :D
 

Parksy

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Oct 27, 2002
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Originally posted by McD
Wonder if the escilation relates to the increase in players ????

or a desire to be like pj from "bika grove like man" :D
Oi less of the dodgy geordie impressions :D :D

Would be intresting to see if the increased player levels were directly related to the increase in injurys.

Reading the report there is it not that 519 were eye injurys. Which will only happen if you have substandard goggles/lenses, or disobey site rules and remove them??!!

Dave
 

Stan

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Jul 18, 2001
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Another point to look at is where they got the data from? Is there an accident report form that the sites have to fill out every time someone gets an injury or is this from Hospital Records? Where doed the U.S. Consumer Product Safety Commission get it's stats from?
In 1999 alone, there were 519 eye injuries among 779 total paintball-related injuries to children under 15.
That is a bloody high statistic. 65% of ALL injuries to under 15 year olds were eye injuries!

There is a similar problem with the statistics in my sport (rowing) where only the 'serious' injuries get reported so the percentage of fatal or serious accidents looks extemely high in percentage terms.

Injuries to adults and children playing paintball have tripled in recent years, including eye damage causing lasting vision loss, a study found.
Would be intresting to see if the increased player levels were directly related to the increase in injurys.
Whilst i agree that there could be a rise in the number of injuries in direct proportion to the rise in participants i don't think that US Paintball participation tripled in one year. I know that it's growing fast but that is extreme.

Ah well, at least it's not all doom and gloom:
Many injuries occur because players are not wearing goggles or face masks, said researcher Dr. David Listman of St. Barnabas Hospital in New York.

Doctors should be aware of the dangers and lobby for restrictions in paintball equipment sales to minors, Listman said.
 

JoseDominguez

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Oct 25, 2002
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These are just injuries from paintball markers though..........so couldn't a factor be the availability of cheap ass plastic crap to any idiot with $50?
Five years ago, how easy was it to find a marker? and how many average teenagers were aware of it for it's prank or vandalism potential?? Thankyou Jackass.

The eye injuries are nothing to do with the growth of paintball as a sport........If you play the sport you wear goggles. Do vicious beatings with a baseball bat get included in the accident figures for baseball? or how about everyone kicked in the nuts? does that factor into soccer injuries?
Most of these accidents are due to missuse of kit, not accidents on a paintball field...... which are mainly twisted ankles, sparains and other general athletics injuries. Eye injuries are very rare in paintball, I expect they are very high amongst idiots who happen to own a marker. (thank you brass eagle for your wonderful plastic crap).
 

D6

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Jun 21, 2002
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Originally posted by JoseDominguez
If you play the sport you wear goggles.
If you play the sport, as a recreational customer, you are issued with goggles, and most-likely advised very strongly that lifting them will result in an injury.

Having marshaled rental customers at sites for years, the amount of kids who do lift their goggles is very worrying. You tell them again and again not to- but they don't listen.

I think an interesting statistic would be eye injuries to the 15+ age group for the whole range. But hey- statistics are like bra's- more interesting in what they conceal than what they reveal ;)
 

knobbs

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I had a customer in the store the other day that wanted to watch thier kids play. When we told them they should have goggles and a chronograph, they kept saying that it was alright because they'd just be watching, so noone would be shooting at them. People just don't seem to realize that no matter how careful you are, accidents happen.
 

shamu

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Apr 17, 2002
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Originally posted by DickySixx
Having marshaled rental customers at sites for years, the amount of kids who do lift their goggles is very worrying. You tell them again and again not to- but they don't listen.
I wish it was just kids who lift their goggles. We have as many problems with adults not listening to the goggle rules as we do kids. At least the kids listen when you yell at them about it :mad:

As far as the statistics go, it's probably a combination of an increase in outlaw/backwoods/unsupervised balling, stupid *******s who watched 8 Mile and Jackass too many times, and better reporting on accidents. Three years ago paintball injuries probably weren't tracked as such. Now that it's becoming more well-known ("you play what? Pinball? Ping-pong??? :p ), doctors report a paintball injury as such.
 

Jon S

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Sep 22, 2003
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Maybe a solution would be for the wal-mart cheapo-plastic guns to come with velocity set at say, 100 fps (arbitary low setting). Velocity adjustment is locked, but can be taken off by a special tool distributed to field owners. I dont think it would be majorly practical, but it would discourage outlaw ball and lead people to fields where they are encouraged to play safely and properly. That way, people who are actually wanting to play can use their marker, and the irresponsible ones/vandals are left with a less dangerous marker.