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Forget sharks - you're more likely to be injured by litter at the beach

Sadly, people plus beach equals litter, so be careful out there.

Cottesloe Beach

A personal shark deterrent program in WA has been embraced by surfers and divers. (AAP) Source: AAP

Our beaches are our summer playgrounds, yet beach litter and marine debris injures one-fifth of beach users, particularly children and older people.

Our research, published in the journal Science of the Total Environment, found more than 7,800 injuries on New Zealand beaches each year – in 2016, some 595 of them were related to beach litter. The most common injuries caused by litter were punctures and cuts, but they also included fractured limbs, burns, head trauma, and even blindness.

Children under 14 suffered 31% of all beach litter injuries, and were injured by beach litter at twice the rate compared with other locations in New Zealand. Beach litter injury claims exceeded NZ$325,000 in 2016, representing a growing proportion of all beach injury claims. Beach injury claims changed from 1.2% of the total in 2007 to 2.9% in 2016.


1 min read

Published

Updated

By Manal Al-Ani

Source: The Conversation



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