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Talk:Refrigerator death

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This is an old revision of this page, as edited by Iconoclast.horizon (talk | contribs) at 23:48, 8 February 2019. The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this revision, which may differ significantly from the current revision.

Why do you think the RSA does not need to be linked?Kdammers (talk) 11:22, 13 June 2013 (UTC)[reply]

no Not bug The RSA is linked, but WP doesn't have an entry so the link displays as red. — Molly-in-md (talk) 12:41, 30 September 2017 (UTC)[reply]

Literary prose

There is an informative piece of creative nonfiction about RD. It includes references that might be of use, but the piece itself is probably inappropriate as a source: http://thenormalschool.com/death-by-refrigerator-by-b-j-hollars-2/ Kdammers (talk) 19:21, 7 March 2016 (UTC)[reply]

Possible sources


So, we should now expand the geographical area of occurrence. Kdammers (talk) 19:41, 7 March 2016 (UTC)[reply]

Outside USA

The article is tagged "Globalize/US". I've tried and failed to find information on comparable legislation to the Refrigerator Safety Act in other jurisdictions. This would seem to be the sort of thing there would be an obscurely named EU directive on, but searches trying to find such a thing are obscured behind a mountain of CFC-related hits. Anyone able to find anything? Otherwise an "outside US" section is going to be a list of incidents. --LukeSurl t c 14:14, 3 February 2017 (UTC)[reply]

Hypothesis about late spread, after Refrigerator Safety Act

I, too, failed to find anything during several hours of searching. Very frustrating.

The only partially useful thing was a report from Australia ("Unintentional asphyxia (choking, suffocation and strangulation) in children aged 0-14 years", at https://www.monash.edu/__data/assets/pdf_file/0003/218460/haz60.pdf). It suggests "Public awareness campaigns and parental education about the dangers of suffocation in bed should also focus on other products that are associated with suffocation of children such as plastic bags, fridges and freezers and toy chests." However, even their own statistics do not show any refrigerator deaths.

My guess is that home refrigerator units spread from the U.S. mostly after the Refrigerator Safety Act had solved the problem. Put these quotations together:

Also, add in the requirement for in-home electricity. The international rate of electrification would be another research opportunity (the WP article on Electrification#Household electrification is shy on details), but might lead to some conclusions about timing. If electricity reached much of the world after RSA's 1958 implementation deadline, then they'd have the newer technology from the get-go.

All in all, I posit that only the U.S. had sufficient numbers of the old locking-latch units that posed such a hazard to playing children. For the rest of the world, they got refrigerators that already had the easy-opening doors. That would mean the phenomenon of refrigerator death was never the problem it was in the U.S. (notwithstanding the occasional sad suffocation story even now).

The problem for us WP editors, of course, is finding a reliable source that says that. My hypothesis is not enough! — Molly-in-md (talk) 12:37, 30 September 2017 (UTC)[reply]

  • yes, we need hard info. My counter-'hypothesis' is that there WERE latch refrigerators (and, probably, more ice-boxes) in some other countries. Maybe, though, they weren't left around with such abandon in other countries.

At https://www.telegraph.co.uk/foodanddrink/8605239/The-rise-of-the-fridge.html, we are told that 2% of British households had refrigerators in 1948 and 13% in 1959.

AT https://blog.liebherr.com/hausgeraete/de/wie-alles-begann-die-geschichte-des-kuehlschranks/, the figure for Germany is given as 10% in 1954.

https://www.expertentesten.de/geschichte-des-kuehlschranks/ says Cuba and other (unnamed) countries neighboring the U.S. had refrigerators as standard household appliances in the 1930s. Kdammers (talk) 07:03, 4 October 2018 (UTC)[reply]