Girl, 4, has emergency surgery after swallowing magnetic bead toys

A mother is warning other parents about the dangers of magnet toys after her daughter needed an emergency operation to remove them.

Hayley Thake’s four-year-old daughter accidentally swallowed two toys she’d made out of small magnetic balls she had been playing with. 

The magnets burn holes in the intestines and bowels and there have been several cases of children becoming seriously unwell after ingesting them in recent years, after using them to make jewellery or putting them on their faces to mimic the effect of piercings. 

After seeing her little girl undergo surgery to have them removed from her bowel, Hayley, from Manchester, has taken to Facebook to warn others of the dangers. 

A mother is warning other parents about the danger of magnet toys after her daughter needed an emergency operation to remove them

In her post, which has been shared more than 7,000 times in less than 24 hours,  Hayley says: ‘Toy danger / hazardous warning.

‘Not a post I ever thought I’d write. But I want to warn other parents of the dangers of magnets. I’m sure there have been other posts but sadly I never saw one. 

‘I will never forgive myself for buying them, but my four-year-old daughter accidentally swallowed two of these clumps of magnet balls. 

‘She’s just undergone surgery to remove them from her bowel.

‘Once inside the body the magnets connect to each other with the organ tissue / lining being pinched in between, eventually burning a hole in it. Luckily my daughter told me she had swallowed them so were able to act quickly.

Hayley Thake's four-year-old daughter accidentally swallowed two toys made from the small magnet balls she had been playing with. Pictured after surgery

Hayley Thake’s four-year-old daughter accidentally swallowed two toys made from the small magnet balls she had been playing with. Pictured after surgery

‘Please please I urge all parents if you have these magnet beads throw them away immediately. Currently in the ward we are on there is a two-year-old who swallowed 14 of them. The consultant said they have so many cases and they should be banned.’ 

The Child Accident Prevention Trust (CAPT) says there’s ‘a disturbing trend in serious injuries from children swallowing small, round, coloured magnets from magnetic toys’, with Hayley’s being the most recent example.

The problem is that if a child swallows the small balls, magnets effectively burn holes in their intestines or bowels, warns the CAPT.

‘The magnets stick together internally and through organs and tissues, and can cut off blood supply causing tissue to die,’ said the Trust.

Hayley says she will never forgive herself for buying them and issued a warning to other parents. Pictured is an X-ray showing the magnets inside her intestine

Hayley says she will never forgive herself for buying them and issued a warning to other parents. Pictured is an X-ray showing the magnets inside her intestine

The magnets burn holes in childrens' intestines or bowels and there have been several cases of children becoming seriously unwell after ingesting them in recent years

The magnets burn holes in childrens’ intestines or bowels and there have been several cases of children becoming seriously unwell after ingesting them in recent years

‘They are much more complex than button batteries to extract.

‘The child will need emergency surgery, then, depending on the severity of the injuries, they may need numerous operations, bowel resection and time in paediatric intensive care.’ 

A CAPT spokesperson said: ‘It’s our understanding that the magnets should be covered by toy safety standards. And magnetic toys made by reputable manufacturers have complied for many years.

‘However, it’s very easy to buy these dangerous magnetic toys online, with no guarantees they are safe.’

After seeing her little girl undergo surgery to have them removed from her bowel, Hayley, from Manchester, has taken to Facebook to warn others of the dangers. Pictured is her post

After seeing her little girl undergo surgery to have them removed from her bowel, Hayley, from Manchester, has taken to Facebook to warn others of the dangers. Pictured is her post

Just last year the Trust highlighted the case of another child, three-year-old Tomas Quinn, from Northern Ireland, who had part of his intestine removed after swallowing magnets.

Suzanne Lawther, a consultant in paediatric surgery at the Royal Belfast Hospital for Sick Children, which has dealt with numerous similar cases, said: ‘They [the magnetic ball toys] are about 10 times stronger than traditional magnets and if the magnets end up on either side of a piece of the digestive tract, the magnetic force is so strong that it actually interferes with the blood supply.

‘They can cause that bit of bowel to die and ultimately to develop a hole or sometimes abnormal connections between different parts of the bowel, which left untreated can make children and adults very unwell and be potentially life-threatening.’