2024-10-01 05:54:33
According to the National Agency for Food, Environmental and Occupational Health Safety (ANSES), the new version of the European standard on the safety of electric toys does not guarantee eye protection for certain children.
ANSES’s warning. In a press release posted online this Tuesday, October 1the national agency for food, environmental and occupational health safety emphasizes that certain toys contain LEDs likely to affect the retina and disrupt the biological rhythms of certain children.
In fact, the European standard on toy safety does not guarantee eye protection for toys, we learn.
Soft toys, dolls, drawing tablets, trucks, spinning tops or even luminous board games: some toys contain LEDs, which emit blue light. This light can affect the retina and disrupt biological rhythms, including sleep, if exposed in the evening and at night.
“Children whose eyes do not completely filter blue light are particularly sensitive to these risks”, underlines in a press release the national agency for food, environmental and occupational health safety, recalling that it warns since 2010 on the effects of LEDs on vision.
“Exposure limit values exceeded”
Requested by the French Ministry of Health, ANSES examined the new version of the European standard on the safety of electric toys, updated in 2020.
After examining the new protocol for verifying the eye safety of toys containing LEDs, it concludes that “the revised version does not guarantee compliance with the limit values ensuring the protection of children’s eyes”.
Thus, ANSES has identified “several errors” in the scientific study on which the protocol is based, errors “which can lead toys declared compliant to exceed the exposure limit values”, according to the press release. She also carried out tests on a sample of 19 LEDs contained in toys available on the market.
A revision to be done “quickly”
They “confirmed that the 2020 version of the standard is less protective than the previous one, from 2005: eight of the toys tested could not have been placed on the market with the 2005 version of the standard, due to exceeding the requirements of security, compared to only one with that of 2020”, details the agency.
“Given the health issues associated with the exposure of children to excessively high levels of blue light and the importance of the standard to guarantee the safety of toys sold”, ANSES recommends initiating a review “rapidly”. of the relevant section of European regulations.
In the meantime, she recommends a temporary return to the 2005 version to check the eye safety of the toys in question.
To protect children from these risks, ANSES also reminds that it is advisable to limit exposure to blue or white LEDs, and to avoid luminous toys two hours before bedtime, so as not to disrupt biological rhythms and falling asleep.
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