WASHINGTON — Seven more U.S. children were sickened after ingesting Chinese-made toy beads that were recalled earlier this week because of a toxic chemical coating, the government said Friday.
The reports of the sickened children, six of whom were hospitalized, came from at least five states: Texas, Delaware, New Hampshire, Illinois and Utah, according to a spokeswoman for the Consumer Product Safety Commission.
The agency recalled the Spin Master Aqua Dots toy Wednesday after two children were knocked unconscious, and then hospitalized, from eating beads covered with a chemical that metabolizes into the compound gamma hydroxy butyrate — the so-called date-rape drug, GHB.
The compound can induce unconsciousness, seizures, drowsiness, coma and death.
CPSC spokeswoman Julie Vallese said the agency received reports on Thursday and Friday of seven additional children sickened by the product, bringing the total to nine. Product recalls frequently spur additional reports of harmed consumers, she said.
One of the first original cases that spurred the recall, involving 20-month-old Jack Esses, originated in Arkansas.
The recall covers 4.2 million of the Aqua Dots toys, which consist of colored beads that can be arranged into designs and then fused together when sprayed with water.
The agency received its first report of a sickened child Monday and ordered stores to pull the toy two days later, Vallese said.
Wal-Mart Stores Inc. said Thursday that it has directed its stores to remove the toys from shelves and has placed a stop on the products at its cash registers to prevent their sale.
Consumers are encouraged to return the toy to its distributor, Toronto-based Spin Master, Vallese said, which will provide a replacement toy.
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