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The brief and tragic history of the trampoline

By | September 27, 2012, 7:10 AM PDT

One of my purest moments of absolute happiness occurred a few years ago in a backyard in Olympia, Washington. I’d traveled there to visit a friend, and while waiting for her to arrive home my friend Ken and I noticed a large trampoline behind her house. On a whim climbed up on it. We gave the trampoline a few tentative bounces, then worked our way up to real jumps. Soon the reverberations of our leaps were propelling each other with more momentum than our childhood bodies had ever permitted. My heart raced and I was giggling both from the exhilaration of the movement, and the delight in the foolishness of the endeavor.

Though I’d pined after the large trampolines that dotted my childhood suburb, my parents would never consider letting my sister and I have one. “They’re too dangerous!” was their decree.

A new study in the journal Pediatrics details such risks, reports the New York Times.

The first trampoline was patented in 1945. The first statement against them from the American Academy of Pediatrics came out in 1977.

The Pediatrics study found that injuries from trampolines rose steadily through around 2005, but have been on the downswing since. Slowed trampoline sales, as opposed to safer trampolines, appear to have caused the decline. The Times’ Laura Geggel reports:

Nearly 98,000 people were injured on trampolines in 2009, 3,100 of them seriously enough to be hospitalized, according to study data from the National Electronic Injury Surveillance System, which collects emergency room information in select hospitals and uses it to estimate nationwide injury rates. That represents an injury rate of about 32 injuries per 100,000 people, compared with 38 injuries per 100,000 in 2004.

The most common injuries were sprains, strains, fractures, bruises and soft-tissue injuries. Though less common, head and neck injuries were the most serious, and accounted for more than 10 percent of all trampoline-related E.R. visits.

Children, especially those under six years old, are the most commonly and most seriously hurt by trampolines. As the smallest people on the trampoline, they’re most vulnerable to injury. Precautions like one-person-at-a-time policies, safety nets, and frame padding might help, but still the lead author tells Geggel, “It’s not a toy.”

With continually sagging sales, and continuing scorn from pediatricians, it’s doubtful the backyard trampoline will last much beyond the next decade. But, dear trampoline, thanks for the memories.

[via The New York Times]

Photo: Suburban Paparazzi/Flickr

More:

How riskier playgrounds may make kids safer

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Audrey Quinn

About Audrey Quinn

Audrey Quinn is a contributing editor for SmartPlanet.

Audrey Quinn

Audrey Quinn
Contributing Editor

Audrey Quinn is a multimedia science journalist based in Brooklyn, New York. She has corresponded for PRI's The World, Radiolab, Deutsche Welle's Living Planet, and a number of NPR affiliate stations. She also produces and hosts a podcast for the Mind Science Foundation. Previously, she performed neuroscience research at the University of Washington Autism Center and the Seattle VA Hospital.

Follow her on Twitter.

Audrey Quinn

Audrey Quinn

Audrey does not have financial holdings that would influence how or what she covers.

She writes for SmartPlanet and is not an employee of CBS.

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Like so much else.
They are great when properly used with mature adult supervision.

I think it is a combination of inattentive parents wanting the trampoline to be a babysitter and the Jacka$$ generation that pushed the limits of stupidity that are proving to be the ultimate demise of trampolines.
Posted by Hates Idiots
1st Oct
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