BEINSMARTSIDE UK Girl, 4, ended up in hospital minutes after drinking slushy at children’s party

Girl, 4, ended up in hospital minutes after drinking slushy at children’s party

Girl, 4, ended up in hospital minutes after drinking slushy at children’s party post thumbnail image
PIC FROM Kennedy News and Media (PIC SHOWS: MARNIE MOORE, THEN FOUR, IN HOSPITAL AFTER DRINKING A SLUSHY) A mum claims her tot went 'floppy and unconscious' minutes after gulping a slushy - now she believes children under 12 should be banned from having the 'poisonous' iced drink. Kim Moore, from Burnley, Lancashire, faced every parent's worst nightmare when her four-year-old daughter Marnie suddenly went 'pale and unresponsive' at a children's party. The 35-year-old had bought her and older sister Orla a refillable slushy but 10 minutes later Marnie fell unconscious. DISCLAIMER: While Kennedy News and Media uses its best endeavours to establish the copyright and authenticity of all pictures supplied, it accepts no liability for any damage, loss or legal action caused by the use of images supplied and the publication of images is solely at your discretion. SEE KENNEDY NEWS COPY - 0161 697 4266
Marnie went pale and became unresponsive after drinking the slushy (Picture: Kennedy News)

A mum is calling for slushies to be banned for children under 12 after her daughter fell ill moments after drinking one.

Marnie Moore, 4, was at a children’s party when she suddenly went ‘pale and unresponsive’ after her mum Kim, 35, bought her a refullable slushy.

Marnie was taken to Burnley General Teaching Hospital in Lancashire where doctors discovered her blood sugar levels were dangerously low.

The young girl was then transferred to Royal Blackburn Teaching Hospital, where she stayed for three days.

Doctors told Kim that her daughter’s medical episode was likely sparked by the slushie she had drunk at the party.

Marnie, now nine, is believed to have suffered from glycerol toxicity.

Earlier this year, a new study warned children younger than eight shouldn’t be given slush-ice drinks containing the sweetener glycerol after researchers tracked the cases of 21 kids who fell in after drinking them.

Kim has said she wants the recommended age for slushies should be 12 after Marnie’s experience with the ‘poison drink’.

PIC FROM Kennedy News and Media (PIC SHOWS: KIM MOORE, 35, WITH HER TWO DAUGHTERS L-R MARNIE MOORE, 9, AND ORLA MOORE, 11) A mum claims her tot went 'floppy and unconscious' minutes after gulping a slushy - now she believes children under 12 should be banned from having the 'poisonous' iced drink. Kim Moore, from Burnley, Lancashire, faced every parent's worst nightmare when her four-year-old daughter Marnie suddenly went 'pale and unresponsive' at a children's party. The 35-year-old had bought her and older sister Orla a refillable slushy but 10 minutes later Marnie fell unconscious. DISCLAIMER: While Kennedy News and Media uses its best endeavours to establish the copyright and authenticity of all pictures supplied, it accepts no liability for any damage, loss or legal action caused by the use of images supplied and the publication of images is solely at your discretion. SEE KENNEDY NEWS COPY - 0161 697 4266
It’s believed Marnie, now nine years old, suffered glycerol toxicity (Picture: Kennedy News)

‘We ended up buying two one-litre refillable cups and they were going off playing, eating, getting drinks and coming back but Marnie didn’t drink the full cup, probably only half,’ she said.

‘Then about 10 minutes later, she started getting really aggravated then she started falling asleep so I just thought she was over-tired. It was only five minutes later when I tried to wake her up that I realised she wasn’t waking up and was unconscious. She’d gone really pale.

‘She wasn’t rousing at all and I think it was mum’s instinct that I knew something wasn’t right. She was floppy and completely unconscious. I was shaking her trying to wake her up and there was nothing.’

What have scientists said about slushies?

Colorful canisters of refreshing frosty cold slushy drinks at an outdoor summer event.
The sugary drinks are popular during the summer (Picture: Getty)

Scientists have warned children younger than eight should not be given slush-ice drinks containing the sweetener glycerol.

Slush drinks in the UK typically contain glycerol, giving them their texture by stopping the liquid from freezing solid.

The ingredient is already not recommended for under-fours in Britain, but academics have called for that number to rise.

Published in Archives of Disease in Childhood, researchers tracked the cases of 21 kids in the UK and Ireland who fell ill after drinking a slushy.

These medics have now warned slushies containing glycerol ‘may cause a clinical syndrome of glycerol intoxication in young children’.

They added: ‘Clinicians and parents should be alert to the phenomenon, and public health bodies should ensure clear messaging regarding the fact that younger children, especially those under eight years of age, should avoid slush ice drinks containing glycerol.’

After Marnie was diagnosed in A&E, she woke up and screamed in ‘agony’, throwing up and crying about her head hurting.

‘Looking back, she had every single symptom of glycerol toxicity. We got transferred to another hospital and they had no idea what had caused it,’ Kim added. ‘We started looking into the slushy because that was the only thing differently she’d had that day.

‘Doctors couldn’t tell me why it had happened but they knew it was the slushy that had caused it. I went into investigative mum mode trying to work out why this had happened to my child.’

Kim has now warned of other places which promoted free slushies – but says they’re ‘promoting poison’.

‘I don’t think these slushies should be allowed at all. I personally wouldn’t allow my child to drink one at all. It’s not a risk I’m willing to take.’

Last year, another mum called for a ban on slushies after her son started fitting after drinking one. Angus Anderson, three, ended up in hospital after he collapsed in front of his mum Victoria while out shopping.

She said he went limp and stone cold around half an hour after drinking the raspberry-flavoured drink in Port Glasgow, Inverclyde.

Get in touch with our news team by emailing us at webnews@metro.co.uk.

For more stories like this, check our news page.

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published.

Related Post