Final Rule: Safety Standard for Magnet Sets, 59961-59989 [2014-23341]
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Vol. 79
Friday,
No. 192
October 3, 2014
Part IV
Consumer Product Safety Commission
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16 CFR Part 1240
Final Rule: Safety Standard for Magnet Sets; Final Rule
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Federal Register / Vol. 79, No. 192 / Friday, October 3, 2014 / Rules and Regulations
CONSUMER PRODUCT SAFETY
COMMISSION
16 CFR Part 1240
[CPSC Docket No. CPSC–2012–0050]
Final Rule: Safety Standard for Magnet
Sets
Consumer Product Safety
Commission.
ACTION: Final rule.
AGENCY:
The Consumer Product Safety
Commission (CPSC, Commission, or we)
is issuing a rule establishing
requirements for magnet sets and
individual magnets that are intended or
marketed to be used with or as magnet
sets. As defined in the rule, magnet sets
are aggregations of separable magnetic
objects that are marketed or commonly
used as a manipulative or construction
item for entertainment, such as puzzle
working, sculpture building, mental
stimulation, or stress relief. Under the
rule, if a magnet set contains a magnet
that fits within the CPSC’s small parts
cylinder, each magnet in the magnet set
must have a flux index of 50 kG2 mm2
or less. An individual magnet that is
marketed or intended for use as part of
a magnet set also must meet these
requirements. The flux index is
determined by the method described in
ASTM F963–11, Standard Consumer
Safety Specification for Toy Safety.
DATES: This rule will become effective
on April 1, 2015. The incorporation by
reference of the publication listed in
this rule is approved by the Director of
the Federal Register as of April 1, 2015.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Thomas Lee, Compliance Officer, Office
of Compliance and Field Operations,
Consumer Product Safety Commission,
4330 East West Highway, Bethesda, MD
20814; telephone: (301) 504–7737, or
email: tlee@cpsc.gov.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
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SUMMARY:
A. Background
The Commission is issuing a safety
standard under the Consumer Product
Safety Act (CPSA) establishing
requirements for magnet sets that have
been associated with serious injuries
and one reported death.1 As discussed
in greater detail in section B of this
preamble, magnet sets are sets of small,
powerful magnets marketed for general
entertainment as construction toys, desk
1 The Commission voted 4–0–1 to publish this
notice in the Federal Register. Chairman Elliot F.
Kaye, Commissioner Robert S. Adler, Commissioner
Marietta S. Robinson and Commissioner Joseph P.
Mohorovic voted to approve publication of the final
rule. Commissioner Ann Marie Buerkle abstained
from the matter.
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toys, sculpture sets, or stress relievers.
The rule also covers individual magnets
that are marketed or intended for use
with or as magnet sets. The Commission
concludes that this rule is necessary to
address an unreasonable risk of injury
and death associated with these magnet
sets.
1. Initial Incident Reports to CPSC and
CPSC’s Response
Significant U.S. sales of magnet sets
marketed for general entertainment
began in 2009. CPSC staff received the
first consumer incident report involving
magnet sets in February 2010. No injury
resulted from this incident. Shortly after
receiving this report, CPSC staff
collected and evaluated samples of the
magnet sets.
In December 2010, we received our
first consumer incident report involving
the surgical removal of magnets that had
been part of a magnet set. During 2011,
CPSC staff collected magnet sets
marketed to children under 13 years
old, and staff evaluated the compliance
of these products with ASTM F963–11,
Standard Consumer Safety
Specification for Toy Safety. Staff
evaluated these products under ASTM
F–963 because some of the products
were labeled and marketed in a manner
that appeared to promote use by
children and this standard includes
requirements for the strength and size of
magnets that are part of a toy intended
for children. For firms whose products
did not have labeling or marketing
information, CPSC staff encouraged
those firms to develop marketing
programs and labeling content to help
ensure that these magnet sets were not
marketed to children. In addition, CPSC
staff issued Notices of Noncompliance
to firms that marketed magnet sets to
children younger than 14 years of age.
In November 2011, in response to
continuing reports of injuries associated
with the products, the CPSC, in
cooperation with two manufacturers,
launched a public awareness campaign,
which included a video public service
announcement (PSA). The PSA advised
children: Not to put magnets from
magnet sets into their mouth; described
the risk of injury presented by the
ingestion of high-powered magnets; and
provided tips to avoid magnet ingestion
injuries, along with guidance for
children who had swallowed magnets
and parents who suspect that their child
has swallowed magnets. Despite the
CPSC’s compliance and public
awareness activities, reported incidents
of magnet ingestion by children
increased from 13 in 2010, to 19 in
2011, and 52 in 2012. Likely due to
CPSC enforcement and regulatory
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activity beginning in mid-2012, and
because the largest distributor ceased
operations at the end of 2012, reported
incidents declined to 13 incidents in
2013, including one fatality, and two
incidents in 2014. We received an
additional magnet ingestion incident
report for which there was insufficient
information to determine the date of the
incident. As of June 24, 2014, 100
ingestion incidents involving, or
possibly involving, ingestion of magnets
from magnet sets have been reported to
CPSC. (As discussed in section C of this
preamble, staff’s analysis of incidents
reported through the National Electronic
Injury Surveillance System (NEISS)
estimates that 2,900 possible magnet set,
emergency department-treated
ingestions occurred in the United States
from January 1, 2009 through December
31, 2013).
2. Corrective Actions
In May 2012, Compliance staff
contacted a total of 13 independent
importers of magnet sets and asked
these importers to provide reports
required under Section 15 of the CPSA.
Most of the firms agreed to stop selling
the products pending the results of
staff’s evaluation of the products. Given
the continued injuries to children, staff
negotiated voluntary corrective action
plans with 11 of the 13 magnet set
importers. These firms agreed to cease
importation, distribution, and sales of
magnet sets. Two importers did not
agree to stop selling the magnets and the
Commission initiated an administrative
action in July and August 2012 seeking
a determination that the magnet sets
present a substantial product hazard
and an order that the firm cease
importation and distribution of the
products. The Commission initiated a
third administrative action in December
2012 after one of the firms that had
agreed to stop sale subsequently
resumed selling magnet sets. Two of the
three administrative actions have been
resolved. In May 2014, the Commission
settled the administrative action against
Maxfield & Oberton Holdings, LLC, and
Craig Zucker, individually, and as an
officer of Maxfield & Oberton Holdings,
LLC. The settlement established and
funded a Recall Trust, which, in
accordance with a corrective action plan
(CAP), is recalling the firm’s magnet
sets. In July 2014, the Commission
settled the administrative complaint
against Star Networks USA, LLC (Star).
Under that settlement, Star has agreed to
implement a CAP providing for the
recall of the firm’s magnet sets. The
third firm, Zen Magnets, LLC, remains
the subject of a CPSC administrative
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action and continues to market and sell
magnet sets.
3. Notice of Proposed Rulemaking
In the Federal Register of September
4, 2012 (77 FR 53781), the Commission
published a notice of proposed
rulemaking (NPR) to address the
unreasonable risk of injury associated
with magnet sets. The NPR proposed a
standard that would require magnets
from magnet sets containing at least one
magnet that fits within the CPSC’s small
parts cylinder to have a flux index of 50
kG2 mm2 or less. The proposed rule
sought comment on whether the rule
should include magnets sold
individually that could be aggregated
into a magnet set. The final rule
modifies the proposal to include
individual magnets marketed or
intended for the same uses as a magnet
set, i.e., as a manipulative or
construction item for entertainment,
such as puzzle working, sculpture
building, mental stimulation, or stress
relief. We discuss this modification and
other differences between the proposed
and final rule in Section F of this
preamble. The information discussed in
this preamble comes from CPSC staff’s
briefing packages for the proposed and
final magnet set rule, which are
available on the CPSC’s Web site at:
https://www.cpsc.gov/PageFiles/128934/
magnetstd.pdf (NPR briefing package)
and https://www.cpsc.gov/Global/
Newsroom/FOIA/
CommissionBriefingPackages/2014/
SafetyStandardforMagnetSetsFinalRule.pdf (final rule briefing
package).
B. The Product
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1. Description of the Product
The magnet sets covered by this rule
typically are comprised of numerous
identical, spherical, or cube-shaped
magnets, approximately 3 millimeters to
6 millimeters in size, with the majority
made from NdFeB (Neodymium-IronBoron or NIB). As discussed in section
F of this preamble, the rule also covers
individual magnets that are marketed or
intended for use with or as magnet sets.
These magnets exhibit strong magnetic
properties. The magnetized
neodymium-iron-boron cores are coated
with a variety of metals and other
materials to make them more attractive
to consumers and to protect the brittle
magnetic alloy materials from breaking,
chipping, and corroding.
The magnets that are part of magnet
sets are often referred to as ‘‘magnet
balls’’ or ‘‘rare earth magnets.’’ Magnet
sets are and have been marketed as:
adult desk toys, the ‘‘puzzles of the
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future,’’ stress relievers, science kits,
and educational tools for ‘‘brain
development.’’ As shown in product
instructions and in videos on related
Web sites, magnet sets can be used and
reused to make various two- and threedimensional sculptures and figures,
jewelry, and toys, such as spinning tops.
Videos also show how these magnets
can be used to mimic mouth and tongue
piercings.
Magnet sets come with varying
numbers of magnets, from as few as 27
magnets, to more than 1,000. Most of the
magnets have been sold in sets of 125
balls or sets of 216 to 224 balls. The one
firm that is currently marketing magnet
sets that would not meet this rule sells
one or more balls individually. Based on
product information provided by
marketers, the most common magnet
size is approximately 5 millimeters in
diameter, although balls as small as
about 3 millimeters have been sold, as
have sets of larger magnet balls (perhaps
15 millimeters to 25 millimeters in
diameter). In addition to magnetic ball
sets, magnet sets comprised of small
magnetic cubes have also been sold, as
have small magnetic rods. Sets made up
of rods, however, have comprised a
relatively small share of the market.
Most magnet sets contain magnets
that are glossy and highly reflective
with the spheres often described as
similar in appearance to BBs or ball
bearings. Magnet set magnets come in a
variety of colors, including silver, blue,
yellow, green and orange. The products
are packaged in a variety of ways,
including fabric pouches, wooden
boxes, and metal tins.
The rule defines ‘‘magnet set’’ as:
‘‘any aggregation of separable magnetic
objects that is a consumer product
intended, marketed or commonly used
as a manipulative or construction item
for general entertainment, such as
puzzle working, sculpture, mental
stimulation, or stress relief.’’ As
discussed in section F of this preamble,
the rule also covers individual magnets
marketed or intended for use with
magnet sets.
2. Use of the Product
For the NPR, CPSC’s Human Factors
staff provided an assessment that
discusses the appeal and use of magnet
sets. Magnet sets have some appeal for
virtually all age groups. These types of
magnets tend to capture attention
because they are shiny and reflect light.
They are smooth, which gives the
magnets tactile appeal, and these
magnets make soft snapping sounds as
they are manipulated. These properties
or characteristics of magnets are likely
to seem magical to younger children and
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may evoke a degree of awe and
amusement among older children and
teens. These features are the foundation
of the magnet sets’ appeal as a
challenging puzzle, or as a
manipulative, or as jewelry. These
magnets may also be used like a stress
ball and as a way to hold things in
place.
Children, from toddlers through teens,
have been exposed to magnet sets in the
home setting and elsewhere. As the NPR
preamble notes, we have reports of
ingestion incidents that involve
children 5 years of age and younger. The
reports reflect similar scenarios to other
ingestion incidents among this age
group because mouthing and ingesting
non-food items is a normal part of
preschool children’s exploratory
behavior. In a number of reported
incidents, the magnets were not in their
original containers, and caregivers were
unaware that some of the magnets from
the set were missing and in the child’s
possession.
As noted in the NPR preamble,
magnet sets also appeal to children of
early-to-middle elementary school age.
Younger children in this age group are
interested in simple three-dimensional
puzzles, and older elementary school
children are interested in highly
complex puzzles. Children in the latter
age group also can engage in activities
that require the type of meticulous work
and attention that would be needed to
create the complex patterns and
structures found on paper and in video
instructions for magnet sets.
Additionally, magnets typically are
included in science curricula for
elementary school children to
demonstrate the basic concepts of
magnetism.
For all of these reasons, and
consistent with reviews on retail Web
sites, magnet sets are sometimes
purchased for children under the age of
14, despite warnings or labeling to the
contrary. For example, approximately
one-third of 53 adults reviewing one
manufacturer’s product on Amazon.com
reported purchasing the magnets for
children 8 through 11 years of age.
Thus, it is foreseeable that some
portion of these products will be
purchased for elementary school
children and teens. Moreover, given the
relatively low cost for some magnet sets,
elementary school children and teens
may purchase the magnet sets
themselves. The incident reports reflect
behaviors that are beyond the intended
use of the product but that are
foreseeable for the groups using them.
For example, it is foreseeable that some
children will place these magnets in
their mouth, even if the manufacturer
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warns against this behavior. The
mouthing of objects, common among
younger children, develops into less
obvious and more socially acceptable
oral habits, which may continue
through childhood and adolescence and
into adulthood (e.g., mouthing or
chewing a fingertip, fingernail, knuckle,
pen, pencil, or other object, especially
while concentrating or worrying).
Where details are provided, the incident
reports describe scenarios that are
consistent with the behaviors of young
children and teens. Although
exploratory play is generally associated
with very young children, people of all
ages use their senses to explore
unfamiliar phenomena. 77 FR 53781,
53783 (Sep. 4, 2012).
3. The Market
Based on information reviewed by
staff on product sales, including reports
by firms provided to the Office of
Compliance and Field Operations, the
number of magnet sets that were sold to
U.S. consumers from 2009 through mid2012, may have totaled about 2.7
million sets, with a value of roughly $50
million. This estimate reflects retail
sales directly to consumers (through
company Web sites and other Internet
retail sites) and sales to retailers who
market the products. Staff’s review of
retail prices reported by importers, and
observed on Internet sites in 2012,
suggested prices of magnets sets
typically ranging from about $20 to $45
per set, with an average price of about
$25.
To our knowledge, all of the firms that
have marketed the products, including
the firm that continues to sell individual
magnets and magnet sets, import the
products packaged and labeled for sale
to U.S. consumers. Several Chinese
manufacturers have the facilities and
production capacity to meet the orders
of U.S. importers. Additionally, there
are no major barriers to market entry for
firms wishing to source products from
China for sale in the United States.
Firms may have sales arrangements with
Internet retailers who hold stock for
them and process orders.
We have identified about 25 U.S.
firms and individuals who imported
magnet sets for sale in the United States
in 2012. The combined sales of the top
seven firms probably have accounted for
the great majority (perhaps more than
90%) of units sold. One firm, Maxfield
& Oberton Holdings, LLC, believed to
have held a dominant position in the
market for magnetic desk sets since the
firm entered the market in 2009, ceased
operating in December 2012, and is no
longer an importer of magnet sets. That
now-defunct firm, along with a few
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larger firms (including a firm based in
Canada with a branch office in the
United States), marketed their products
through accounts with retailers. They
have also sold their products directly to
consumers via the Internet, using their
own Web sites, or other Internet
shopping sites. In addition to products
offered for sale by U.S. importers,
consumers also have the ability to
purchase magnetic sets directly from
sources in Hong Kong or China that
market products through a leading
Internet shopping site.
C. Risk of Injury
The risk of injury addressed by this
rule is damage to intestinal tissue
caused when a person ingests more than
one magnet from a magnet set (or one
magnet and a ferromagnetic object). The
magnets are attracted to each other in
the digestive system, damaging the
intestinal tissue that becomes trapped
between the magnets. In rare cases,
there can be interaction between
magnets in the airways and digestive
tract (esophagus). These injuries can be
difficult to diagnose and treat because
the symptoms of magnet ingestion often
appear similar to those of less serious
conditions, such as the flu, and because
many doctors are unfamiliar with the
risks of magnet ingestion. In addition,
the limitations of standard diagnostic
tools to identify and evaluate the
presence of magnets in the body may
make magnet ingestion difficult to
identify. Serious injury and even death
are consequences of ingestion of strong
magnets by children.
1. Incident Data
NEISS data. CPSC staff reviewed data
from the NEISS database of magnetrelated ingestion cases treated in
emergency departments from January 1,
2009 to December 31, 2013.2 CPSC staff
analyzed 456 magnet-related ingestion
cases and determined that 121 of the
cases involved or possibly involved
ingestion of magnets from magnet sets.
Staff further determined that an
estimated 2,900 ingestions of magnets
from magnet sets were treated in U.S.
emergency departments during this 5year period—an estimated average of
580 emergency department-treated
magnet ingestions per year. The largest
portion of these incidents involved
2 The Commission collects information on
hospital emergency room-treated injuries through
the NEISS database. This data can be used to
provide national estimates of product-related
injuries treated in U.S. hospital emergency
departments. Incidents reported to the Commission
represent a minimum count of injuries. To account
for incidents that are not reported to the
Commission, the staff calculates an estimated
number of such injuries.
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children 4 through 12 years of age. An
estimated 1,900 of the 2,900 victims are
in the 4- through 12-year-old age group
(65.3 percent). For more information
about the process of developing the
estimates of incidents, see the
memorandum from the Directorate for
Epidemiology, located at Tab B of staff’s
briefing package: https://www.cpsc.gov/
Global/Newsroom/FOIA/
CommissionBriefingPackages/2014/
SafetyStandardforMagnetSetsFinalRule.pdf.
Databases other than NEISS. The
preamble to the proposed rule (77 FR at
53784 through 53785) summarized the
data for incidents reported through
databases other than NEISS from
January 1, 2009 through June 30, 2012.
These incidents involved the ingestion
of magnets by children between the ages
of 1 and 15. For that period, we received
reports of 50 incidents involving the
ingestion of magnets by children in this
age range. Of those 50 incidents, 38
involved the ingestion of high-powered,
ball-shaped magnets contained in
products that meet the definition above
of ‘‘magnet set’’; five of the 50 incidents
possibly involved ingestion of this type
of magnet. In 35 of the 43 incidents
involving or possibly involving magnets
from a magnet set, two or more magnets
were ingested. Hospitalization was
required in 29 of the 43 incidents, with
surgery necessary to remove the
magnets in 20 of the 29 hospitalizations.
In the other nine hospitalizations, the
victim underwent colonoscopic or
endoscopic procedures to remove the
magnets. In 37 of the 43 incidents, the
magnets were ingested by children
younger than 4 years old or between the
ages of 4 and 12 years.
Since publication of the NPR, the
Commission has received reports of
additional incidents involving the
ingestion of magnets by children
between the ages of 1 year and 15 years
old, including one report of a fatality
associated with the ingestion of small
spherical magnets. We have now
received reports of a total of 100
incidents involving or possibly
involving the ingestion of highpowered, ball-shaped magnets
contained in products that meet the
definition of ‘‘magnet set.’’ The reports
indicate that the incidents occurred
between January 1, 2009 and June 24,
2014. Sixty-one of the 100 reported
incidents required hospitalization. In 87
of the 100 reported incidents, the
magnets were ingested by children
younger than 4 years old or between the
ages of 4 and 12 years.
Among the 100 reported incidents is
one fatality that involved magnets from
a magnet set. In August 2013, a 19-
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month-old female died from ischemic
bowel caused by magnets from magnet
sets in her small intestine.
2. Hazard Scenarios
As discussed in the preamble to the
proposed rule, the incident reports
describe scenarios that are consistent
with behaviors of children in the
identified age ranges. As noted in the
NPR, mouthing of objects, which is
common among younger children,
develops into less obvious and more
socially acceptable oral habits, which
may continue through childhood and
adolescence and into adulthood (e.g.,
mouthing or chewing a fingertip,
fingernail, knuckle, pen, pencil, or other
object, especially while concentrating or
worrying). 77 FR 53781, 53783 (Sep. 4,
2012). For example, in the incidents
reported in the 8 through 12-year-old
age group, one child described wanting
to feel the force of the magnets through
his tongue; one was trying to see if the
magnets would stick to her braces; and
another wanted to see if the magnets
would stick together through her teeth.
In another common scenario that
accounted for half of the reported
ingestion incidents among 8 to 15 year
olds, children used multiple magnets to
simulate piercings of their tongue, lips,
or cheeks. In incidents reported among
children under the age of 4 years,
children put the magnets in their
mouths and either intentionally or
accidentally swallowed them.
The preamble to the proposed rule
provides summaries of several incident
reports that demonstrate a few of the
reported hazard scenarios (77 FR at
53785 to 53786). These scenarios
include two incidents in which young
girls (10 and 13 years of age) swallowed
multiple magnet balls while using the
magnets to simulate tongue and lip
piercings. The girls underwent surgical
procedures to remove magnet balls from
their intestines. In three other scenarios,
magnet balls ingested by children under
the age of 3 years had to be removed
surgically from the children’s stomach
and intestines. In three of the five
incidents described in the preamble to
the proposed rule, the child’s parent or
caregiver did not realize the child had
ingested magnets, which resulted in a
delay in treatment and an increase in
the severity of the injuries from the
magnets, which attached to each other
across intestinal tissue.
3. Details Concerning Injuries
Multiple factors complicate the
diagnosis of injury from magnet
ingestion (77 FR 53786). These factors
include a lack of awareness by medical
professionals of the dangers posed by
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the ingestion of high-powered magnets;
the inability of standard diagnostic tools
to demonstrate that the ingested item is
a magnet; the similarities between
symptoms resulting from magnet
ingestion injuries and less serious
conditions like the flu; and victims’
inability or unwillingness to
communicate to their caregivers or
medical personnel that they have
ingested magnets.
The preamble to the proposed rule
discussed the manner in which ingested
high-powered magnets can cause harm
by compressing intestinal tissue, the
specific types of injuries that can result
when tissue is trapped between two
magnets, and the risks associated with
those injuries (77 FR 53786). These
injuries include perforations that can
result in infection due to leakage of gut
contents into the abdominal cavity and
obstructions that can lead to intestinal
tissue becoming necrotic or rupturing
and causing contamination of the
abdominal cavity. Surgical procedures
often are required to remove magnets
from the digestive system.
Complications can arise after these
procedures, including bleeding,
infection, and ileus (temporary paralysis
of gut motility). Long-term
complications resulting from this type
of surgical procedure can include: (1)
Adhesions (where bands of intraabdominal scar tissue form that can
interfere with gut movement and can
cause obstruction); (2) removal of long
sections of injured bowel; and (3)
impaired digestive function.
D. Statutory Authority
This rulemaking is conducted
pursuant to the Consumer Product
Safety Act (CPSA). Magnet sets are
‘‘consumer products’’ that can be
regulated by the Commission under the
authority of the CPSA. 15 U.S.C.
2052(a).
Under section 7 of the CPSA, the
Commission is authorized to promulgate
a mandatory consumer product safety
standard that sets forth performance
requirements for a consumer product or
that sets forth requirements that a
product be marked or accompanied by
clear and adequate warnings or
instructions. 15 U.S.C. 2056. A
performance, warning, or instruction
standard must be reasonably necessary
to prevent or reduce an unreasonable
risk or injury associated with a
consumer product.
Section 9 of the CPSA specifies the
procedure that the Commission must
follow to issue a consumer product
safety standard under section 7. In
accordance with section 9, the
Commission commenced this
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59965
rulemaking by issuing an NPR on
September 4, 2012 (77 FR 53781),
including the proposed rule and a
preliminary regulatory analysis under
section 9(c) of the CPSA. In addition,
the Commission requested comments on
the risk of injury identified, the
regulatory alternatives under
consideration, and other possible
alternatives for addressing the risk. Id.
2058(c). As discussed in section E of
this preamble, the Commission
considered the comments received in
response to the proposed rule.
Section 9 also requires the
Commission to provide interested
persons ‘‘an opportunity for the oral
presentation of data, views, or
arguments,’’ in addition to an
opportunity to provide written
comments. Id. 2058(d)(2). Accordingly,
the Commission held a public hearing
on the proposed rule on October 22,
2013, at agency headquarters in
Bethesda, MD. The hearing notice was
published in the Federal Register (78
FR 58491). The submissions forwarded
to the agency by presenters before the
hearing, can be read online at: https://
www.cpsc.gov/en/Newsroom/PublicCalendar/2014/Public-Hearing/Agenda/
Magnet-/. Videos of the presentations
can be viewed at: https://www.cpsc.gov/
Newsroom/Multimedia/?vid=66455. The
Commission also allowed submitters to
forward additional written comments
for 1 week after the hearing. We
considered all of the written and oral
comments received.
With this notice, the Commission
issues a final rule, along with a final
regulatory analysis. See id. 2058(f)(1).
According to section 9(f)(1) of the CPSA,
before promulgating a consumer
product safety rule, the Commission
must consider and make appropriate
findings to be included in the rule on
the following issues: (1) The degree and
nature of the risk of injury that the rule
is designed to eliminate or reduce; (2)
the approximate number of consumer
products subject to the rule; (3) the
public’s need for the products subject to
the rule, and the probable effect the rule
will have on utility, cost, or availability
of such products; and (4) the means to
achieve the objective of the rule while
minimizing adverse effects on
competition, manufacturing, and
commercial practices. Id. 2058(f)(1).
Pursuant to section 9(f)(3) of the
CPSA, to issue a final rule, the
Commission must find that the rule is
‘‘reasonably necessary to eliminate or
reduce an unreasonable risk of injury
associated with such product’’ and find
that issuing the rule is in the public
interest. Id. 2058(f)(3)(A)&(B). In
addition, if a voluntary standard
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addressing the risk of injury has been
adopted and implemented, the
Commission must find that: (1) The
voluntary standard is not likely to
eliminate or adequately reduce the risk
of injury, or that (2) substantial
compliance with the voluntary standard
is unlikely. Id. 2058(f)(3(D). The
Commission also must find that the
expected benefits of the rule bear a
reasonable relationship to the cost of the
rule and that the rule imposes the least
burdensome requirements that would
adequately reduce the risk of injury. Id.
2058(f)(3)(E)&(F).
E. Response to Comments on the
Proposed Rule
This section summarizes the issues
raised by comments on the proposed
rule and provides that Commission’s
responses to those comments.
1. Oral Presentations
On October 22, 2013, the Commission
provided the public an opportunity to
present views on the proposed rule in
person before the Commission
Presenters at the hearing included
representatives from the Consumer
Federation of American, Consumers
Union, the American Academy of
Pediatrics, and the National Association
of Pediatric Gastroenterology,
Hepatology, and Nutrition. The medical
experts reported that the available
research most likely reflects an
undercount of the true incidence of
injuries associated with magnet sets.
The doctors also stated there was no
evidence suggesting that the victims’
caregivers were negligent or otherwise
impaired at the time of the ingestion
incidents. Rather, the doctors noted that
ingestion-related injuries, such as those
associated with magnet sets, can be
experienced in households with the
most caring and well-educated
caregivers. The doctors also testified
that public education campaigns take a
long time to show effects and that those
campaigns would not be as effective in
reducing magnet ingestion injuries as
the proposed rule, which they strongly
urged the Commission to finalize.
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2. Written Comments
The preamble to the NPR invited
comments concerning all aspects of the
proposed rule. We received written
comments from more than 5,000
commenters in response to the NPR.
Many of the comments contained more
than one issue, and many of the
comments addressed the same or similar
issues. Thus, we organized our
responses by issue. All of the comments
can be viewed at: www.regulations.gov,
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by searching under the docket number
for this rulemaking, CPSC–2012–0050.
Commission’s Authority To Promulgate
the Rule
(Comment 1)—Many commenters
opine that promulgating the rule
exceeds the Commission’s authority.
More specifically, several commenters
state that the Commission has no
authority to issue a rule that would
result in a prohibition of all magnet sets
currently on the market simply because
certain consumers use magnets in a
manner that is inconsistent with the
purpose intended for the product. Other
commenters opine that the rule violates
consumers’ constitutional rights,
including the right to freedom of
expression through purchasing products
they desire, and that a rule that
prohibits the sale of covered magnet sets
is drastically out of proportion to the
risks presented by the product. Other
commenters characterize the safety
standard as the government usurping
responsibility for the safety of children,
which they say should properly reside
with children’s parents or caregivers.
(Response 1)—The Commission has
the authority to issue a rule establishing
performance requirements that a
product must meet so that the product
does not present an unreasonable risk of
injury to consumers. Section 7 of the
CPSA authorizes the Commission to
promulgate consumer product safety
standards as performance requirements
or that require products to be marked or
accompanied by clear and adequate
warnings and instructions. The
requirements of a standard issued under
this provision must be reasonably
necessary to prevent or reduce an
unreasonable risk of injury associated
with the product. Determining whether
a product presents an unreasonable risk
of injury requires the Commission to
consider the costs and benefits of
regulatory action. The regulatory
analysis discusses that assessment (see
Section H of this preamble). The
Commission must balance such factors
as the severity of injury, the likelihood
of injury, and the possible harm the
regulation could impose on
manufacturers and consumers. If
evidence demonstrates that misuse of a
product results in an unreasonable risk
of injury, the Commission has the
authority to promulgate a rule
reasonably necessary to reduce or
eliminate that risk. Certainly parents
and caregivers must be responsible for
their children’s safety. However, as
discussed elsewhere, parents and
caregivers may not be aware of the
hazards that magnets present. Finally,
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there is no constitutional right to
purchase a product.
(Comment 2)—Several commenters
characterize the Commission’s
enforcement activities (filing
administrative complaints, requesting
certain retailers and importers to stop
sales of magnet sets, and requesting
recalls of magnet sets) as improper
means to prohibit certain magnet sets.
The commenters suggest that
rulemaking, rather than these
enforcement actions, is the appropriate
approach.
(Response 2)—Enforcement activities
are intended to remove products from
the market that present a substantial
product hazard. This rulemaking
proceeding is intended to establish
requirements that magnet sets must
meet from the effective date of the rule
going forward. As such, this rulemaking
proceeding seeks to impose
requirements on all magnet sets subject
to the rule that are sold after the rule
becomes effective. The administrative
proceeding and enforcement activities
address only the products currently or
previously distributed by specific
importers and retailers.
(Comment 3)—Several commenters
opine that the Commission would be
acting arbitrarily or capriciously in
violation of section 706(2) of the
Administrative Procedures Act (APA)
by promulgating the rule; that the rule
violates due process requirements; and
that the Commission should hold a
formal hearing under Sections 556 and
557 of the APA, even if such a hearing
is not required statutorily.
(Response 3)—The Commission is
following the rulemaking procedures set
forth in sections 7 and 9 of the CPSA
and in section 553 of the APA. The
commenters refer to section 556 and 557
of the APA. These provisions apply to
formal rulemaking. However, the
magnet proceeding is governed by
section 553 of the APA, which codifies
the procedure for informal rulemaking.
By following the appropriate procedures
under the CPSA and the APA, the
Commission is providing the process
that is due.
Lack of Product Defect
(Comment 4)—Commenters point out
that magnet sets pose no risk of injury
when used properly, that they function
as intended, and therefore, they are not
defective. The commenters contend that
the improper use of a safe product by a
minority of consumers does not render
the product defective and does not
warrant promulgating a rule that would
remove the product from the market.
(Response 4)—To promulgate a
consumer product safety standard, the
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Commission must find that the rule is
reasonably necessary to reduce an
unreasonable risk of injury associated
with the product. A product may
present an unreasonable risk of injury,
even if the product does not contain a
fault, flaw, or irregularity that impacts
the manner in which the product
functions. When assessing risk, CPSC
considers how consumers may actually
use a product, not just the manner of
use intended by the manufacturer. For
example, the Commission’s cigarette
lighter standard requires disposable and
novelty lighters to meet child-resistance
requirements to protect against the
misuse of lighters by children. 16 CFR
part 1210. Similarly, the Commission’s
lawn mower standard includes
requirements to guard against
consumers intentionally removing a
shielding safety device from the mower.
16 CFR part 1205. See Southland Mower
v. Consumer Product Safety
Commission, 619 F.2d 499, 513 (5th Cir.
1980) (reviewing the Commission’s
lawn mower standard, the court stated:
‘‘Congress intended for injuries
resulting from foreseeable misuse of a
product to be counted in assessing
risk’’).
Impact of the Rule on the Availability of
Magnet Sets for Certain Uses
(Comment 5)—Commenters state that
high-powered magnets have many
laudable uses, including for education
and research in sciences, such as
biology, chemistry, and physics. Other
commenters note that magnet sets are
used therapeutically for individuals
with autism or attention-deficit
disorder. These commenters presume
that the rule would eliminate from the
marketplace high-powered magnets
intended for such uses.
(Response 5)—Magnets have long
played a role in education. However, the
specific products that are covered by the
rule have been on the market only since
2008. The rule will cover only ‘‘any
aggregation of separable magnetic
objects that is a consumer product
intended, marketed or commonly used
as a manipulative or construction item
for entertainment, such as puzzle
working, sculpture building, mental
stimulation, or stress relief.’’ Magnets
that are not subject to the restrictions of
the rule would continue to be available.
For example, less powerful magnets are
sometimes included in science kits to
demonstrate magnetism. In addition,
high-powered magnets that serve
industrial and commercial needs would
not be covered by the rule.
Products that meet the definition of
the ‘‘magnet sets’’ that do not comply
with this rule would no longer be
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available for purchase, even if used by
individuals to manage their attention
deficit disorder or attention deficit
hyperactivity disorder (ADD/ADHD)
symptoms. However, magnets that are
not restricted by the rule would still be
available for purchase and perhaps
could be used to manage ADD/ADHD
symptoms. More generally, magnets are
but one of many objects, including
various types of stress balls, ‘‘worrybeads,’’ and chiming Baoding hand
exercise balls that are available for the
uses commenters cite. A variety of other
products are marketed specifically as
‘‘fidget toys’’ to help children manage
ADD/ADHD symptoms. Staff is aware of
one study in which the authors reported
successful use of simple stress balls to
help sixth graders maintain focus in the
classroom (Stalvey & Brasell, Summer
2006). In short, some substitutes for
magnet sets are available for
management of ADD/ADHD symptoms,
and successful use of these substitutes
predates the availability of magnet sets.
Magnet sets present the same hazards
to children with ADD/ADHD as they do
to children who do not have this
condition. One comment summarizes a
study of 38 cases of magnet ingestion.
Among those were two children, a 12year-old and a 14-year-old with ADHD,
who swallowed strong magnets,
although of a type different than those
typically found in magnet sets. The first
child required a laparoscopy; the other
child required extensive surgical
intervention. One teacher who reported
giving magnets to children with ADD/
ADHD in his middle school classes
commented that he ‘‘needed to buy a
new set every year,’’ suggesting the ease
with which the pieces are lost over time
and the difficulty adults may have
maintaining control of the sets.
(Comment 6)—Commenters note that
magnet sets are fun stress-relievers and
have value as an artistic medium. The
commenters also note that sculpture
made from the magnet sets that are the
subject of the rule constitute an art form
that would be lost if the rule is
promulgated.
(Response 6)—The Commission is
aware that magnet sets are used to
relieve stress; and likewise, the
Commission is aware that some
individuals have developed a form of art
with the magnets that would be affected
if the magnet sets used for this purpose
are prohibited. Although magnet sets of
the type that have been involved in
incidents and are currently purchased
by consumers for stress relief and
sculpture-making would not comply
with the rule, magnet sets made from
weak magnets (i.e., with a flux index 50
kG2 mm2 or less) or from magnets that
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do not fit within the small parts
cylinder would be allowed by the rule.
Magnet sets that comply with the rule
could serve some of the purposes of
magnet sets that are currently available.
For example, Liberty Balls, marketed by
Assemble, LLC, and sold in sets of eight
large spheres, are an example of a type
of magnet set that would meet the
performance requirements of the rule.
Due to the large size of the Liberty Balls
magnets, their uses are more limited
than the magnet sets that are the subject
of this rule. However, the existence of
Liberty Balls demonstrates the
possibility that companies can develop
magnet sets that meet the standard and
serve some of the uses of the magnet
sets that fail the standard.
Similarly, children’s magnetic toys
provide an example of how magnet sets
might be developed that would meet the
standard. Children’s toy manufacturers
have successfully adapted their
magnetic construction toys since the
adoption of the requirements for toys
with magnets in the 2007 edition of
ASTM F963, ‘‘Standard Consumer
Safety Specification for Toy Safety.’’
Following this example, individual
magnets with a flux index over 50 could
be permanently connected by rods or
other means, such that the resulting
magnetic objects are not small parts, i.e.,
do not fit entirely within the small parts
cylinder. Such a magnet set might not
be a perfect substitute for current
magnet sets but could fulfill some of the
uses of current magnet sets, without
posing the risk of injury or death.
(Comment 7)—Noting the popularity
of magnet sets for educational,
scientific, and therapeutic uses, some
commenters claim that continued
demand for small, high-powered
magnets would result in a ‘‘black
market’’ for the products after the rule
is promulgated. Some commenters state
that there could be consumer-toconsumer sales of used products, and
others maintain that consumers would
be able to purchase magnet sets directly
from noncomplying companies
(including firms located in China). A
few commenters note that these black
market magnet sets are less likely to be
sold with warning labels or other
accompanying information related to
hazards.
(Response 7)—We acknowledge that
there would continue to be a demand
for magnet sets by some consumers,
which could lead to increases in
consumer-to-consumer sales and
potentially black market sales of the
products. Furthermore, such sales are
probably less likely to be accompanied
by labeling and warnings that alert
buyers to the hazards associated with
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the products. CPSC enforcement
activities and continued dissemination
of consumer information on the hazards
of magnet sets might be necessary to
reduce the future sales of noncomplying
products.
(Comment 8)—Some commenters
opine that magnet sets that comply with
the size and flux index requirements of
the rule will lose their utility as
manipulative desk toys. Other
commenters suggest that weaker
magnets would be less safe because
weaker, individual magnets could be
separated more easily from the magnet
set during use, or separate more readily
within the gastrointestinal system if
ingested while attached to other
magnets.
(Response 8)—The intent of the rule
is to reduce or eliminate the hazard
presented by magnet sets currently on
the market by requiring that magnet sets
and individual magnets for use with
magnet sets that are small enough to fit
within the small parts cylinder must
have a flux index of 50 kG2 mm2 or less.
The rule would still allow strong
magnet sets with magnets that do not fit
entirely within the small parts cylinder.
Magnetic products sold as toys that
comply with the toy standard for
children have included rods, balls, and
various geometric shapes that do not fit
within the small parts cylinder. Such
products offer interesting entertainment,
such as sculptures and construction
activities, but they are much larger and
safer than the subject magnet sets
intended for adults. Another possibility
would be to invent a magnet set
composed of magnets with a flux index
below 50 kG2 mm. Because there
currently are no magnet sets on the
market with magnets that have a flux
index of less than 50 kG2 mm2, we do
not know how such magnets would
perform when used in the same way
currently available magnet sets perform.
Magnet sets that comply with the
requirements of the rule would contain
magnets that are too large to be
swallowed easily or would have very
weak attraction forces that would not
pose the same ingestion hazards as
magnet sets currently on the market.
Review of incident data does not
indicate that any injuries have been
caused by magnets with flux index
values below 50 kG2 mm2.
(Comment 9)—Some commenters
disparage the intended uses of magnet
sets, calling them, for instance,
‘‘mindless desk ornaments,’’
‘‘a diversion,’’ and ‘‘frivolous items.’’
These commenters cite the high severity
of the injuries associated with magnet
sets and express dismay that the CPSC
ever allowed them to be sold.
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(Response 9)—The CPSC does not
perform premarket approvals of
consumer products; and typically, the
CPSC will not engage in enforcement or
regulatory activity regarding a product,
until information is received or
developed, which indicates that the
product may present an unreasonable
risk of injury to consumers. Reasonable
parties may differ on the value to
society of manipulative toys; however,
many types of manipulative toys exist
for children and adults.
Impacts of the Rule on Businesses and
Jobs
(Comment 10)—Many commenters
note that the rule would harm firms that
import magnet sets and will result in
lost jobs for employees of these firms.
(Response 10)—In the preliminary
initial regulatory analysis, staff noted
that the economic impact of the rule
would be most severe for the seven
firms that account for the great majority
(perhaps more than 98%) of units sold
as of June 2012. Five of these importers
reportedly derived most or all of their
revenues from the sale of the magnet
sets that do not meet the performance
requirements of the rule. The other two
leading importers of magnet sets
reportedly had fairly broad product
offerings, which could lessen the
severity of the economic impact of the
rule. As a result of compliance activity
pursued by the Commission’s Office of
Compliance and Field Operations, four
of these seven importers agreed
voluntarily to stop selling magnet sets
that would not be compliant under this
rule. One additional firm, Maxfield &
Oberton Holdings, LLC, ceased
operations. This firm (marketer of
‘‘Buckyballs’’) is believed to account for
nearly 90 percent of magnet set sales
through June 2012. Only one of the
seven small importers, Zen Magnets,
LLC, continues to market magnet sets
that are subject to the rule. This firm
apparently derives all of its revenues
from the sale of magnet sets. Unless the
firm can successfully market magnet
sets that comply with the rule or other
products, the firm might go out of
business when the rule takes effect.
A large share of magnet sets have been
sold directly to consumers by importers
who used their own Internet Web sites
or other Internet shopping sites, but the
rule would also affect retailers of the
products, whether the products are sold
online or physically in stores. However,
these retailers are not likely to derive
significant proportions of total revenues
from sales of affected magnet sets.
Accordingly, the impacts on individual
firms should be minimal.
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The commenters are correct that the
rule, by prohibiting the sale of
noncompliant magnet sets in the United
States, may also result in some job
losses. However, the impact on job
losses is probably limited because
magnetic balls generally are produced
outside the United States and are merely
packaged and/or distributed by U.S.
importers.
Costs and Benefits of the Rule
(Comment 11)—One commenter
opines that the preliminary regulatory
analysis overstates the societal costs of
injuries from magnet sets because
incidents involving other small magnets
are improperly attributed to the magnet
sets that are the subject of the proposed
rule. In addition, this commenter opines
that the injury costs used in the analysis
were higher than indicated by the
CPSC’s Revised Injury Cost Model
(ICM).
(Response 11)—Both the initial and
final regulatory analyses acknowledge
that there is some uncertainty
concerning the estimated annual
average of medically attended injuries,
noting that some of the cases described
as ‘‘possibly’’ involving magnet injuries,
actually may not have involved the
magnets that are the subject of the rule.
Hence, it is possible that the analyses
overstate the societal costs associated
with the magnets included in the rule.
The final regulatory analysis also points
out that there were an additional 230
NEISS cases (representing about 1,500
emergency department-treated injuries
annually) in which the magnet type was
classified as ‘‘unknown or other.’’ Thus,
to the extent that this category of
incidents involved magnets covered by
the rule, the analyses would tend to
understate the societal costs associated
with the magnets subject to the rule.
Therefore, given the uncertainty
concerning the societal costs associated
with the magnet sets, the analyses could
be underestimating or overestimating
the societal costs.
Regarding the commenter’s assertion
that injury costs used in the preliminary
regulatory analysis were higher than
indicated by the ICM, we note that the
commenter fails to take into account
updates to the ICM based on new and
improved cost databases. The ICM is
fully integrated with NEISS and
provides estimates of the societal costs
of injuries reported through NEISS. The
major aggregated components of the
ICM include: Medical costs; work
losses; and the intangible costs
associated with lost quality of life or
pain and suffering. The ICM is
described further in section H.3.a of the
preamble. The commenter also does not
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take into consideration that the cost
estimates in the preliminary regulatory
analysis were age and sex specific and
involved only those under the age of 15
who had ingested magnets from magnet
sets. Furthermore, the commenter
apparently also includes injury costs
associated with the diagnosis category
‘‘foreign body,’’ i.e., foreign objects
propelled into the victim’s body, which
is a different hazard pattern than
‘‘ingested foreign objects.’’ The costs of
injuries resulting from foreign objects
being propelled into a victim’s body are
only about half of the costs of injuries
associated with ingested foreign objects.
Finally, the commenter applies
inappropriate inflators in adjusting the
injury cost estimates to 2011 dollars.
The Commission maintains that the
estimated injury costs associated with
ingestions of small, high-powered
magnets in the preliminary regulatory
analysis and final regulatory analysis
involved proper application of the ICM.
Risk and Severity of Injury
(Comment 12)—The Commission
received a significant number of
comments from health care
professionals with personal experience
in treating children who either narrowly
avoided, or actually sustained, injuries
following ingestion of small, highpowered magnets.
Virtually all comments received from
medical professionals express support
for a rule eliminating magnet sets of the
type that have been involved in
incidents. The medical professionals
point out that injuries caused by the
ingestion of high-powered magnets are
often difficult to diagnose because of the
inability of standard diagnostic tools to
demonstrate that the ingested item is a
magnet; there are similarities between
symptoms resulting from magnet
ingestion injuries and less serious
conditions like the flu; and the victims
are unable or unwilling to communicate
to their caregivers or medical personnel
that they have ingested magnets. The
medical professional commenters
express concern with the rapidly
growing number of cases and note that
magnet ingestions often result in rapid
and severe injuries with devastating and
costly long-term consequences.
(Response 12)—The Commission is
aware of the severity of the injuries that
often result from the ingestion of small,
high-powered magnets from magnet sets
and the difficulties frequently
encountered by medical professionals in
diagnosing and treating these injuries.
The Commission is also aware that there
are costs associated with the treatment
of injuries resulting from the ingestion
of these magnets that will be reduced
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substantially if magnet sets must
comply with the rule. (See Section H of
this preamble).
(Comment 13)—Commenters argue
that high-powered magnet sets should
not be prohibited because the number of
injuries is low—43 reported injuries
possibly involving magnet sets during
the period from January 2009 to June
2012—considering that approximately
2.7 million magnet sets have been sold
since 2009. These commenters also note
that there have been no fatalities
associated with the product.
(Response 13)—The number of
incidents reported to the Commission,
now totaling 100 cases through June 24,
2014, cannot be used to estimate the
number of injuries in the U.S.
population because case reports are
anecdotal and are not based on a
probability based sampling design. The
anecdotal incidents reported to CPSC
constitute a minimum number of
incidents in the U.S. However, the
incidents reported to CPSC through
hospital emergency departments and
captured in the NEISS database can be
used to estimate the number of
incidents nationwide because NEISS
data come from a probability based
stratified random sample of U.S.
hospitals with emergency departments.
An analysis of incidents obtained
through the NEISS estimates that 2,900
possible magnet set, emergency
department-treated ingestions occurred
in the United States from January 1,
2009 through December 31, 2013. This
amounts to approximately one incident
per 930 magnet sets. We do not agree
that this is a low figure for injuries. In
addition, we are aware of one fatality
involving a 19 month-old female, who
died from ischemic bowel caused by the
ingestion of magnets from a magnet set.
Furthermore, the benefits of the rule,
notwithstanding the public’s desire for
current magnet sets that do not meet the
rule, bear a reasonable relationship to
the costs of the rule.
(Comment 14)—Several commenters
point out that the dangers posed by the
ingestion of small, high-powered
magnets are not obvious.
(Response 14)—Staff agrees that the
unique hazard resulting from the
ingestion of small, strong magnets is
unlikely to be obvious to the general
public. People are generally aware of the
choking hazard posed by small balls and
other small parts, but they do not
understand how the characteristics of
magnets can cause injuries that are
different from, and more severe than,
swallowing another small object.
Despite the publicity and response
generated by the NPR, as well as the
Commission’s compliance and
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communications activities, some
commenters misunderstand the hazard.
Many commenters seem unaware that
the majority of victims are older
children and teens, and the commenters
focus exclusively on the risk to young
children. Similarly, commenters tend to
mention magnets as a choking hazard,
comparable to choking on foods, such as
hot dogs and non-food small parts. In
reality, choking is not the injury
mechanism related to magnets. The
ways that children and teens interact
with magnets are not obvious and seem
unclear to many commenters. For
example, some commenters write
derisively about ‘‘people letting their
children eat magnets.’’ However, most
incidents are unwitnessed, and based on
data from choking and poisoning
incidents in which children
intentionally ingest non-food items, it is
likely that only the youngest children
voluntarily swallow magnets. This is
because choking on non-food items
occurs predominantly among children
younger than three years, and ingestion
of poisonous substances declines as
children approach five years of age.
(Comment 15)—Other commenters
point out that the Commission has not
prohibited certain products, such as
trampolines, balloons, and hazardous
household chemicals, which
commenters contend present a greater
risk of injury to children than magnet
sets. They assert that this weighs against
a rule prohibiting certain magnet sets
that do not meet the rule’s performance
requirements.
(Response 15)—Magnet sets, and the
hazard patterns associated with them,
are quite different from other products.
Because of these differences,
comparisons of injury rates between
magnet sets and other products are not
meaningful. Key differences include: the
obviousness of the hazard; the severity
of the resulting injury; the difficulty in
diagnosing the resulting injury; the
numbers of products in use; the breadth
of products covered in the product
category; the age of the victims
sustaining injuries; and the existence of
requirements to address the hazard.
Responsibility of Caregivers for Injuries
Resulting From Magnet Ingestion
(Comment 16)—Several commenters
claim that the incidents involving
magnet sets are caused by negligent
caregivers, who should supervise their
children better. However, other
commenters opine that caregiver
supervision was not a relevant factor in
determining the causation of the
incidents.
(Response 16)—The issue of caregiver
supervision is related to caregiver
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compliance with warnings and other
hazard communications. Consumers
may be aware of a hazard, but they may
not make changes in their behavior that
would avoid the hazard. Securing or
preventing access to magnet sets would
be especially difficult regarding older
children and adolescents because they
are strongly independent and
resourceful. Expecting caregivers to
supervise these children constantly is
unrealistic. Magnet ingestions can
happen quickly, and the Commission
believes that it is also unrealistic to
expect caregivers to maintain
continuous, focused attention on
younger children, especially children at
the upper end of the at-risk age range.
Indeed, research has found that people
cannot be perfectly attentive,
particularly over long periods of time,
regardless of their desire to do so.3
Caregivers are likely to be distracted, at
least occasionally, because they must
perform other tasks, are responsible for
supervising more than one child, are
exposed to other salient but irrelevant
stimuli, or are subject to other stressors.
Moreover, caregivers are unlikely to
maintain high levels of vigilance, unless
they believe that such vigilance is
necessary. If caregivers who own
magnet sets believe they have properly
secured the sets or think that their
children are not aware of the sets,
caregivers are unlikely to assume that
constant supervision is needed.
Furthermore, children may be exposed
to these magnet sets in locations where
caregivers cannot supervise the children
or do not have direct control over the
amount of supervision required, such as
at school or in other households.
Adolescents, in particular, are strongly
independent, and it is unrealistic to
expect caregivers to supervise
adolescents constantly.
Alternatives to the Rule: Warnings and
Education Programs
(Comment 17)—Many commenters
state that current warnings are sufficient
to address the risk of injury presented
by magnet sets, or they express the
belief that more robust and prevalent
warnings and educational programs are
a better alternative than a rule
prohibiting products that do not meet
the rule’s performance requirements.
Some commenters state that the
assumption that warnings do not work
undermines past safety standards
accepted by the CPSC and, in fact, calls
into question the entire safetymonitoring process.
3 Wickens, C. D., & Hollands, J. G. (2000).
Engineering psychology and human performance
(3rd Ed.). Upper Saddle River, NJ: Prentice Hall.
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(Response 17)—As discussed in the
Human Factors staff memorandum that
was part of the NPR briefing package,
warnings are widely recognized as a less
reliable approach to controlling hazards
than design or guarding approaches.
Unlike these latter approaches, which
directly limit hazard exposure, warnings
and other hazard communications must
first educate consumers about the
hazard and then persuade consumers to
change their behavior to avoid the
hazard. In addition, to be effective,
warnings must rely on consumers to
behave consistently, regardless of
situational or contextual factors (e.g.,
fatigue, stress, social influences) that
influence precautionary behavior.
The Commission’s position is not that
warnings are uniformly ineffective.
However, consumer compliance with
warnings depends strongly on the
specific circumstances surrounding the
hazard. Several factors suggest that
compliance with warning labels related
to magnet sets is likely to be low
because consumers may not notice and
attend to the warnings. Exposure to
ingestion warnings is likely to be very
limited because: (1) The individual
magnets are too small to contain onproduct warnings; (2) the magnet sets do
not inherently require consumers to
return the magnets to a storage case or
other package after every use, in
packaging that might include a warning;
and (3) the magnet sets can be
manipulated without the necessity of
referring to instructions that might
include a warning. In addition, the
nature of the magnet-ingestion hazard
and the resulting injuries can be
difficult to convey to consumers; and
the resulting injuries have been
misunderstood even by medical
personnel and by commenters to the
NPR, some of whom erroneously
identify choking on the magnets as the
hazard presented by this product.
Without a clear understanding of this
information and how magnet ingestions
differ from other small-part ingestions,
consumers are unlikely to comply with
a warning.
We acknowledge that developing
understandable warnings aimed at
parents and other caregivers may be
possible; and we acknowledge that
caregivers who receive such warnings
may attempt to keep these products out
of the hands of young children.
However, as noted, consumer
compliance with warnings depends
strongly on the specific circumstances
surrounding the hazard. Several factors
suggest that compliance with warning
labels related to magnet sets is likely to
be low, even if consumers understand
the hazard and its consequences. For
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example, the cost of compliance
associated with magnet-ingestion
warnings is high. ‘‘Cost of compliance’’
is defined as any cost, such as time,
effort, or inconvenience that is required
to comply with a warning; compliance
is negatively associated with cost. The
warnings on the packaging and
instructional material for some magnet
sets instruct consumers to secure the
magnets and keep them away from all
children ages 14 years and younger. As
evidenced in the comments, many
consumers are likely to reject these
warnings as lacking credibility. We
recognize that caregivers who receive
warnings about magnet sets may attempt
to keep these products out of young
children’s hands. However, warnings
are likely to be particularly ineffective
among caregivers with older children
and adolescents because caregivers
would not expect these children to
mouth toys and other objects as
frequently as younger children.
Furthermore, even if caregivers attempt
to comply with warnings about the
magnet-ingestion hazard, preventing a
child’s access to these magnets still
might prove quite difficult. The time
and effort to secure the product after
every use, and the difficulties associated
with trying to identify a suitably secure
location to store the product, may deter
consumers from heeding the warnings.
Some adolescents have cognitive and
motor skills similar to an adult’s,
making it extremely challenging to keep
the product out of adolescents’ hands,
despite caregivers’ efforts. Although
adolescents also may be capable of
understanding warnings about magnet
ingestions, their behavior is influenced
strongly by social and peer pressures,
and adolescents are known to test limits
and bend rules.4 Thus, warnings against
using magnets to simulate tongue or
facial piercings are unlikely to be very
effective among this age group, unless
such piercings are viewed as socially
unacceptable among their peers.
Educational programs may offer more
opportunities to present the information
in varied ways and in greater detail than
is possible via a warning label.
4 Brown, T., & Beran, M. (2008). Developmental
stages of children. In R. Lueder & V. J. B. Rice (Eds.),
Ergonomics for children: Designing products and
places for toddlers to teens (pp. 13–30). New York:
Taylor & Francis. Kalsher, M. J., & Wogalter, M. S.
(2008). Warnings: Hazard control methods for
caregivers and children. In R. Lueder & V. J. B. Rice
(Eds.), Ergonomics for children: Designing products
and places for toddlers to teens (pp. 509–539). New
York: Taylor & Francis. Zackowitz, I.B., &
Vredenburgh, A.G. (2005). Preschoolers,
adolescents, and seniors: Age-related factors
pertaining to forensic human factors analyses. In Y.
I. Noy & W. Karwowski (Eds.), Handbook of human
factors in litigation (Chapter 35). Boca Raton, FL:
CRC Press.
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However, mere knowledge or awareness
of a hazard is not enough. Such
programs suffer from limitations similar
to those of warnings because, like all
hazard communications, the
effectiveness of educational programs
depends upon the affected consumers,
not only in terms of receiving and
understanding the message, but also in
being persuaded to heed the message.
Magnet sets present an especially
difficult challenge for public education
programs because the hazard is obscure
and difficult to convey in simple terms.
Furthermore, teenagers are a significant
part of the at-risk population, and they
provide distinct challenges to the
effectiveness of public education
programs. Thus, even education
programs that clearly communicate the
hazard to consumers will not
necessarily motivate appropriate
behavioral change or reduce the
frequency of incidents.
Alternatives to the Rule: Bitterants
(Comment 18)—A small number of
commenters discuss bitterants (also
known as aversives) as an option. Some
conclude that adding a bitter coating to
magnets would be an effective
alternative to the prohibition of magnet
sets that do not meet the rule’s
performance requirements. A few
commenters assert that the method is
unproven and question that approach
for various reasons.
(Response 18)—In principle, adding
an aversive agent to a product is a
rational approach to reducing the risk of
mouthing and ingestion. Laboratory
studies have shown this approach to be
effective among children and adults in
deterring repeated ingestion of various
substances. Yet, real-world
investigations have not demonstrated
the effectiveness of bitterants in
preventing poisonings.5 CPSC staff’s
1992 final report of its study of the topic
(https://www.cpsc.gov/library/foia/
foia99/os/aversive.pdf. at p. 3)
concluded that because bitterants do not
deter initial ingestion, ‘‘[a]versive agents
are unlikely to protect children from
being harmed after ingesting . . .
substances that can injure or kill after
one or two swallows.’’
Bitterants are least likely to be
effective among young children who
gain access to high-powered magnets.
Despite rejecting bitter substances in
testing environments, children in home
settings, nevertheless, frequently ingest
unpalatable substances, such as
5 Cf. White, N. C., Litovitz, T., Benson, B. E.,
Horowitz, B. Z., Marr-Lyon, L., & White, M. K.
(2009). The impact of bittering agents on pediatric
ingestions of antifreeze. Clinical Pediatrics, 48(9),
913–921.
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gasoline, cleanser, toilet bowl cleaner,
and ammonia. Younger children,
particularly those under 3 years of age,
may swallow a number of magnets at a
time before reacting to any aversive
agent applied to the magnets.
Aversives may be a more effective
deterrent for older children and young
teens, presuming these children are
aware that the agent has been applied to
the magnets and they are familiar with
its taste. For older children who are not
familiar with the taste of an aversive,
the mere presence of the agent would
not deter mouthing the magnets or
trying to use them to mimic pierced lip
or tongue jewelry. Older children and
teens may also give magnets to others to
try as a prank. Preteens and teens are
prone to test what they have been told,
particularly when what they have been
told involves restrictions of any sort.
Thus, warnings that the products taste
bad may not prevent children in these
age groups from tasting the magnets.
(Some proportion of the population,
possibly as high as 30 percent, may be
insensitive to bitterants such as
denatonium benzoate.) However,
children are likely to reject magnets
treated with bitterants, and the bitterant
may indeed deter repeated attempts
among most children.
Ingestions could still occur even if a
bittering agent is found effective for this
purpose. Ingestions may be intentional
among the youngest children, but
ingestions are likely to be accidental
among older groups. The power of the
magnetic forces inherent in these
products can cause magnets to move
erratically as pieces repel or attract, and
movement of magnets toward the back
of the throat could trigger the reflex to
swallow the magnets before the person
can remove them.
Alternatives to the Rule: Child-Resistant
Packaging
(Comment 19)—Several commenters
state that child-resistant (CR) packaging
requirements are a better alternative
than the proposed performance
requirements. However, others believe
that such requirements would be
ineffective in reducing or eliminating
the risk of injury.
(Response 19)—CR packaging could
be devised to make an enclosed magnet
set inaccessible to most young children.
However, compliance with CR
packaging is likely to be low and
inconsistent; and the effectiveness of
this approach depends on the caregiver
and other users securing the magnets in
the CR packaging after every use. This
is behavior that we consider unlikely to
occur. Although CR closures have been
shown to be effective in reducing
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poisonings with various products (e.g.,
Rodgers, 2002), non-use and incorrect
use of CR closures on products
containing chemicals or
pharmaceuticals—products consumers
are more likely to understand to be
hazardous (as opposed to strong magnet
sets)—can result in many poisonings
annually among children younger than
5 years old. Furthermore, CR packaging,
referred to as ‘‘special packaging’’ under
the Poison Prevention Packaging Act, is
designed to be significantly difficult for
children under 5 years of age to open.
15 U.S.C. 1471(4). Thus, CR packaging
is an impractical approach for older
children, whose cognitive and motor
skills overlap those of adults.
Flux Index
(Comment 20)—One commenter
questions the relationship of the flux
index (FI) to anatomical data, which the
commenter considers to be most
germane to the hazard. The commenter
requests that the rule be modified to
redefine the criteria, ‘‘by relying on
objective anatomical data tied to the
potential risks associated with
swallowing injuries and refine the
testing protocol to isolate the field
strength and/or attach forces that can
reasonably be expected to develop at the
distances reflected by anatomical data.’’
Referencing an ultrasound study, the
commenter asserts that the minimal gut
wall thickness in children is 0.5 mm,
and the commenter suggests that when
measuring the magnet maximum surface
gauss reading, instead of measuring at a
probe distance of 0.25 to 0.51 mm above
the magnetic pole surface, as currently
required in ASTM F963–11, it is more
appropriate to base the measuring
distance on the minimum gut wall
thickness. The commenter suggests that
using a probe separation distance of 1.0
mm (2 × 0.5 mm = 2 sections of gut wall)
makes more sense because 1 millimeter
‘‘is the magnetic field strength at that
critical distance that may bear a rational
relationship to injuries.’’
(Response 20)—Commission staff
agrees that the strength of the magnet
field and the separation of the magnets,
or lack thereof, are important factors
contributing to the risk of injury posed
by any strong magnet. The
gastrointestinal (GI) system is folded on
itself within the abdominal cavity, and
during transit through the GI system,
there are many opportunities for
magnets in different GI locations to pass
nearby to each other and then interact
when separated by only the thin gut
walls. Commission staff believes that
measuring the maximum surface gauss
reading for the FI input at a set distance
of 1.0 mm (equivalent to two
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thicknesses/layers of gut wall) is
oversimplistic and inappropriate, unless
the maximum surface gauss reading
measured at that 1.0 millimeter distance
is essentially zero.
Although the suggested value of 1.0
millimeter is anatomically valid, it is
not particularly meaningful in terms of
the injury mechanism. This is because
conventional magnets do not ‘‘wait’’ to
get within 1 millimeter of each other
before they begin to interact, and the gut
wall cannot block magnetic forces.
Rather, once a pair of magnets comes
within a distance where the extent or
reach of their magnetic fields allows
them to interact, the result is nearinstantaneous attraction, with
consequent near-instantaneous
compression of any trapped tissues.
Although the thin wall of the small
intestine can be conveniently defined
anatomically by its thickness, the tissue
offers minimal resistance to the
compression forces of the magnet. Thus,
the tissue trapped between magnets may
be compressed so that the distance
between the magnets is much smaller
than 1.0 millimeter. The compression
forces deprive the tissue of its blood
supply, and they also squeeze out the
tissue fluids, rapidly reducing the gut
wall thickness to micron values, and
essentially mummifying the tissue in
situ. The measurement distance for the
FI in the rule is closer to this negligible
distance than the 1.0 millimeter
distance that the commenter suggests;
and therefore, the measurement distance
for the FI in the rule is more appropriate
for defining powerful magnets capable
of causing GI injuries.
(Comment 21)—Several commenters
question whether a flux index value of
50 kG2 mm2 is low enough to prevent
harm.
(Response 21)—The development of
the flux index requirement that appears
in ASTM F963, Consumer Safety
Specification for Toy Safety, which is
now a mandatory CPSC standard, was
outlined in the NPR. (77 FR 53781–82,
September 4, 2012). ASTM F963–11
defines a ‘‘hazardous magnet’’ and a
‘‘hazardous magnet component’’ as one
that has a flux index greater than 50 kG2
mm2 and that is a small object. ASTM
set the flux index value at 50 kG2 mm2,
by measuring the weakest magnets in
children’s toys that were suspected of
causing injuries, and then adding a
safety factor. Review of incident data
related to children’s toys and magnet
sets does not indicate that any injuries
have been caused by individual magnets
with flux index values below 70. CPSC
staff will continue to monitor incidents
and seek information about the lowerbound limits of the injury mechanism so
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that the established method continues to
be appropriate.
(Comment 22)—Several commenters
question whether the rule is adequate
for assessing the hazard posed by an
aggregation of individual magnets, each
of which has a flux index of 50 or less.
(Response 22)—The staff
memorandum included in the NPR
briefing package acknowledged
concerns with the existing ASTM F963
standard method regarding aggregated
magnets, as follows: ‘‘A toy with
multiple weak small part magnets could
present an issue that the existing ASTM
F963 magnet requirements do not
address, namely: stacking or stringing of
magnets. . . . when these small part
magnets are combined, they could
create a(n aggregated) magnet with an
effective flux index over 50 kG2 mm2
depending upon their characteristics.’’
(Notice of Proposed Rulemaking for
Hazardous Magnet Sets, Staff Briefing
Package, pp. 54¥55). Individual
magnets with a flux index of 50 kG2
mm2 or less (which currently do not
exist in the market) would be smaller
and more difficult to manipulate and
have less attraction force than magnets
in existing magnet sets. Individual
magnets with a flux index of 50 kG2
mm2 or less could be mounted
permanently or attached side-by-side to
create a magnetic object with multiple
magnetic poles on one surface. Doing so
would create a multipole magnetic
object that has a higher attraction force
than the individual magnets on its
surface. Because there currently are no
magnet sets on the market with magnets
that have a 50 kG2 mm2 flux index or
less, we do not know how they would
perform when used as a part of a magnet
set.
(Comment 23)—One commenter
disagrees with the proposed flux index
method, stating that the commenter’s
proprietary technology could be used to
make ‘‘safe’’ magnet sets, even if the
flux index measurement of individual
magnets is greater than 50. The
commenter uses a proprietary
technology to magnetize the surface of
a single magnet to create multiple poles
(positive and negative regions) on the
surface of a single magnet. The
commenter refers to these proprietary
magnets as ‘‘Polymagnets.®’’ Essentially,
this process creates a permanent
aggregation of north and south poles in
the surface of a single magnet. The
commenter requests that the
Commission narrow the scope of the
rule to apply only to magnet sets
comprised of magnets having no more
than two magnetic pole regions on any
exposed magnet surface, thereby,
exempting multiple pole magnets.
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(Response 23)—The commenter’s
claim that a process exists that could be
used to make ‘‘safe’’ magnet sets, even
if the flux index measurement of
individual magnets is greater than 50
kG2 mm2, is based on proprietary
technology, which, to our knowledge,
has not been applied to any magnet sets
currently on the market. The commenter
concedes that he ‘‘has not fully analyzed
the use of a densely coded pattern’’ on
small cubes or spheres and claims only
that ‘‘early indications suggest that
dramatic improvements to the magnetic
field * * * can be achieved’’ using the
proprietary technology. These
statements indicate that the commenter
has not applied this technology to small,
high-powered magnet sets or even
concluded that such an application is
scientifically possible or economically
feasible. CPSC is not aware of any
magnet set products on the market that
are comprised of magnets with
multipole surfaces using the
commenter’s technology. Moreover, it is
not likely that this process will be
applied to small, high-powered magnet
sets in the foreseeable future. Thus, the
Commission does not believe that any
exemption for these types of magnets is
necessary or appropriate, particularly
because currently, no Polymagnet®
magnet sets exist that could be tested to
determine whether such magnet sets
present an unreasonable risk of injury.
(Comment 24)—The same commenter
also states that the flux index
measurement method is imprecise
because it provides a range of acceptable
distances between the gauss meter and
the magnetic surface being measured.
(Response 24)—The flux index
measurement method specifies the use
of a gauss meter and an axial probe with
a distance between the active area
(diameter of 0.76 +/¥ 0.13 mm) and
probe tip of 0.38 +/¥ 0.13 mm. This
means the magnetic flux density is
measured at a distance of between 0.38
millimeters and 0.51 millimeters above
the magnet surface. The tolerance cited
accounts for variations in the length of
the axial probe tip, which is a function
of the equipment used, and therefore,
does not constitute a precise value.
F. Description of the Final Rule
The Commission is issuing a rule
establishing a standard for magnet sets
and individual magnets that are
marketed or intended for use with or as
magnet sets. This section of the
preamble describes the rule, including
differences between the proposal and
the final rule.
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1. Scope, Purpose, and Effective Date—
§ 1240.1
This section of the final rule states
that the requirements in 16 CFR part
1240 are intended to reduce or eliminate
an unreasonable risk of injury to
consumers who ingest magnets that are
part of magnet sets and individual
magnets that are marketed or intended
for use with or as a magnet set. The
standard applies to all magnet sets, as
defined in § 1240.2, and relevant
individual magnets manufactured or
imported on or after the date 180 days
after publication of the final rule.
Individual magnets. The scope of the
final rule has been revised from the
proposal so that the rule explicitly
covers magnets that are sold
individually and are intended or
marketed to be used in the same way as
magnet sets or as a part of a magnet set.
The Commission is aware of one firm
that sells magnet sets and also sells
single magnet spheres at a per-magnet
price through the same Web site on
which the firm promotes and sells sets
of magnets. This firm sells individual
magnet spheres for 10 cents each and
allows customers to purchase up to
1,152 magnets in a single order. The
firm charges a shipping rate of $5.00 for
any quantity of individual magnets
purchased. Another firm, Star, which
recently settled an administrative
complaint with the Commission, sold
individual magnet spheres for between
9 and 19 cents each (depending on the
number ordered), and allowed
customers to purchase up to 10,000
magnets in a single order.
Because the proposed rule described
the scope of the rule as covering
aggregations of magnets, magnets that
are sold individually, arguably would
not be subject to the requirements of the
safety standard under the scope
provision, as proposed. Thus, under the
proposed scope, firms might be able to
circumvent the safety standard
requirements simply by pricing and
selling magnet spheres individually that
are intended to be used as part of an
aggregation of magnets as a magnet set.
Under the final rule, all magnet spheres
intended for use as magnet sets, as
defined by the rule, are subject to the
requirements of the safety standard,
whether they are sold individually or in
the aggregate.
Changing the word ‘‘children’’ to
‘‘consumers.’’ The proposed scope
section stated that the rule is intended
to reduce or eliminate an unreasonable
risk of injury to children. The final rule
changes the word ‘‘children’’ to
‘‘consumers’’ to clarify that the rule is
intended to address risks posed to teens
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as well as young children. As the
incident data make clear, both teens and
young children have been harmed when
swallowing magnets from magnet sets.
Because the term ‘‘children’’ could be
subject to interpretations that might
exclude teens, the final rule uses the
term ‘‘consumers.’’
2. Definitions—§ 1240.2
This section of the final rule provides
definitions for the terms ‘‘magnet set’’
and ‘‘individual magnet.’’ The final rule
modifies the proposed definition of
‘‘magnet set’’ to clarify certain aspects of
the definition. The Commission does
not intend for these modifications to
change the scope of the rule from the
proposal, but rather, to describe more
clearly the products subject to the rule.
The final rule also adds a definition for
the term ‘‘individual magnet.’’
Definition of ‘‘magnet set.’’ To
respond to comments on the NPR and
to provide greater precision, the
Commission has modified the definition
of ‘‘magnet set’’ in the proposed rule by:
• Removing the word ‘‘permanent’’;
• Replacing the phrase ‘‘intended or
marketed by the manufacturer
primarily’’ with the phrase ‘‘intended,
marketed or commonly used’’;
• Replacing the word ‘‘desk toy’’ with
‘‘item’’; and
• Specifying factors that could
indicate whether a magnet set meets the
definition.
The final rule definition removes the
word ‘‘permanent’’ from the phrase
‘‘separable, permanent magnetic
objects’’ because the word ‘‘permanent’’
is superfluous. Any magnet, whether it
maintains its magnetic strength
permanently or not, can cause serious
damage to intestinal tissue, if ingested.
The final rule replaces the phrase,
‘‘intended or marketed by the
manufacturer primarily,’’ with the
phrase: ‘‘intended, marketed or
commonly used.’’ The revision seeks to
prevent a manufacturer or importer of
magnet sets from avoiding the rule by
simply stating in marketing and other
materials that the magnets are intended
for uses other than those specified in the
definition. For example, this
modification will preclude firms from
claiming that their products are
intended as science kits to avoid the
rule, if, in fact, the products are
commonly used as magnet sets (i.e., as
a manipulative or construction item for
entertainment, such as puzzle working,
sculpture building, mental stimulation,
or stress relief). Common uses may be
indicated by information found in
consumer reports to the CPSC, firm
reports to the CPSC, injury reports, and
consumer comments/reviews posted on
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product Web sites stating that a product,
regardless of whether it is intended or
marketed by the manufacturer as such,
was, in fact, being used as a
manipulative or construction item for
entertainment, such as puzzle working,
sculpture building, mental stimulation
or stress relief. This change clarifies that
the common usage of a firm’s magnet
products could be a consideration in
determining whether the magnets are
intended for use as manipulatives for
entertainment, irrespective of the firm’s
stated intentions.
The final rule definition replaces the
term ‘‘desk toy’’ with ‘‘item’’ to prevent
excluding magnet sets from the scope of
the rule if a particular product is not
explicitly labeled or expressly marketed
as a desk toy.
The final rule specifies factors that are
relevant in determining the intended
uses of a magnet set. These are factors
that Commission staff may consider in
determining whether a product falls
under the definition of ‘‘magnet set.’’
Explicitly stating these factors in the
rule should provide clearer direction to
firms and the public about what
products will be covered by the rule. We
may consider the manner in which the
individual magnet or magnet set is
promoted, marketed, and advertised. As
part of this inquiry, staff may review the
labeling and packaging of the product,
information on the firm’s Web site about
intended uses of the product,
information in other promotional
materials, and where and how the
product is displayed at retail stores or
on the Internet. In addition, we may
consider the uses for which the product
is commonly recognized by consumers.
Information provided by consumers and
firms, injury reports, and consumers’
online reviews or comments for the
product are examples of sources that
could be useful to determine what
consumers consider to be the uses of the
product.
In developing this part of the ‘‘magnet
set’’ definition, the Commission
considered regulatory and statutory
provisions that describe factors to be
used in determining the intended use of
a product. The Commission’s small
parts regulation specifies factors
relevant to a determination of which
toys and other articles are intended for
use by children under 3 years of age. 15
U.S.C. 1501.2(b). The small parts
regulation states: ‘‘In determining which
toys and other articles are intended for
use by children under 3 years (36
months) of age, for purposes of this
regulation, the following factors are
relevant: the manufacturer’s stated
intent (such as on a label) if it is a
reasonable one; the advertising,
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promotion, and marketing of the article;
and whether the article is commonly
recognized as being intended for
children under 3.’’ Id. The definition of
‘‘children’s product’’ in the CPSA lists
factors to consider in determining
whether a product is primarily intended
for children 12 years of age or younger.
15 U.S.C. 2051(a)(2). The ‘‘magnet set’’
definition draws from both the
regulatory definition in the small parts
rule and the statutory definition of
‘‘children’s product’’ to specify factors,
which include the manufacturer’s stated
intent, information provided with or on
the product, and the commonly
recognized uses of the product.
The definition does not include other
magnetic products, such as toys
intended for children and jewelry.
Magnets that are part of a toy intended
for children are already covered by the
requirements in ASTM F963–11, which
is a mandatory CPSC standard. The
definition also does not include magnets
intended for industrial or commercial
applications, such as motor
components, magnetic bearings,
magnetic couplings, welding clamps, oil
filters, disc drives, loudspeakers,
headphones, microphones,
instrumentation, switches, and relays.
Definition of ‘‘individual magnet.’’
The final rule adds a definition of
‘‘individual magnet.’’ As discussed
above, the Commission is aware that the
firm that currently sells magnet sets that
would be prohibited by the rule also
sells individual magnets for use with
magnet sets. The Commission seeks to
prevent firms from circumventing the
rule by selling individual magnets for
the same uses as the magnet sets that
have been involved in incidents, and at
the same time claiming that the
individual magnets are not subject to
the rule because the magnets are not
sold as sets. The individual magnets
covered by the rule are only the magnets
that are intended or marketed for use
with or as a magnet set. The
Commission does not intend to cover
the many types of individual magnets
that are sold for other uses, such as
refrigerator magnets, collar stays, or
various commercial and industrial uses.
3. Requirements—§ 1240.3
This section sets forth the
requirements for magnet sets. If a
magnet set contains a magnet that fits
within the small parts cylinder that
CPSC uses for testing toys, all magnets
from that set must have a flux index of
50 kG2 mm2 or less. Because the final
rule covers individual magnets that are
intended or marketed for use with or as
a magnet set, the requirements section
of the final rule states that individual
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magnets, as defined in the rule, must
meet the requirements. The proposed
rule set out the small parts and the flux
index requirements in two subsections
of § 1240.3. The final rule consolidates
these provisions into one section.
The small parts cylinder referenced in
the rule is specified in 16 CFR part
1501—Method for Identifying Toys and
Other Articles Intended for Use by
Children Under 3 Years of Age Which
Present Choking, Aspiration, or
Ingestion Hazards Because of Small
Parts. If an object fits completely within
the small parts cylinder, this indicates
that the object is small enough to be
ingested. If a magnet that is part of a
magnet set (or an individual magnet, as
defined) is too large to fit within the
small parts cylinder, the magnet meets
the standard, regardless of the magnet’s
flux index.
Small magnets (i.e., those that fit
within the small parts cylinder) that are
part of a magnet set (and individual
magnets, as defined) must have a flux
index of 50 kG2 mm2 or less. This limit
is based on the level that is specified in
ASTM F963–11. As discussed in the
preamble to the NPR (77 FR 53781), the
flux index of a magnet is an empirical
value developed by ASTM to estimate
the attraction force of a magnet. The flux
index limit of 50 kG2 mm2 was
developed by ASTM, with CPSC staff’s
participation, to address injuries
resulting from strong magnets that
separate from toys. Because the magnets
from toys involved in incidents had flux
index measurements greater than 70 kG2
mm2,the ASTM working group chose a
flux index of 50 kG2 mm2 as a cutoff
because that value was significantly
below the value for the magnets
involved in incidents.
4. Test Procedure for Determining Flux
Index—§ 1240.4
This section of the rule describes how
to determine the flux index of magnets
that are part of a magnet set. If the
magnet set contains more than one
shape or size of magnet, at least one of
each shape and size is selected for
testing. The flux index of the selected
magnets is measured in accordance with
the procedure set forth in sections
8.24.1 through 8.24.3 of ASTM F963–11,
Standard Consumer Safety
Specification for Toy Safety. The flux
index of the magnet is calculated by
multiplying the square of the magnet’s
surface flux density (in KGauss), by its
maximum cross-sectional area (in mm2).
The ASTM standard uses a gauss meter
and probe that measures the surface flux
density at 0.015 inches (0.38 mm) above
the magnet’s surface. The area is
measured at the largest cross-section of
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the magnet that is perpendicular to the
axis of its magnetic poles.
In the NPR, we noted that the
products at issue are typically
aggregations of magnets, rather than
individual magnets that often separate
from toys. We also observed that when
magnets are aggregated, their magnetic
strength may increase. We requested
comments on whether it may be
desirable to develop a method for
testing the strength of aggregated
magnets in addition to the method for
testing the strength of individual
magnets. We received no comments
proposing methodologies for testing the
strength of an aggregation of magnets.
Furthermore, because there are no
magnet sets currently on the market
with magnets that have a 50 kG2 mm2
flux index or less, we believe that the
aggregation scenario is adequately
addressed in the rule.
5. Findings—§ 1240.5
In accordance with the requirements
of the CPSA, we have made the findings
stated in section 9 of the CPSA. The
findings are discussed in section N of
this preamble.
G. Alternatives
The Commission has considered
alternatives to reduce the risk of injury
related to the ingestion of magnets
contained in magnet sets. However, as
discussed below, the Commission does
not believe that any of these alternatives
would adequately reduce the risk of
injury.
1. Voluntary Recalls
Although most of the companies that
manufacture or import magnet sets have
voluntarily agreed to stop selling (and in
some cases recall) these products, and
several retailers have agreed to recall
and stop sale, the Commission has been
unsuccessful in negotiating voluntary
recalls and stop sales with one company
that continues to market magnet sets.
Pursuing voluntary recalls with current
and possibly future manufacturers and
importers of magnet sets would be
reactive and would entail waiting for
new incidents to occur rather than
preventing them. Moreover, recalls
would not prevent new entrants into the
market in the future; a rule will set
requirements that all products must
meet from the effective date of the rule
going forward.
2. Voluntary Standard
Currently, there is no applicable
voluntary standard in effect. Before
publication of the NPR, a group of
magnet set importers and distributors
requested that ASTM International
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develop a voluntary standard for the
labeling and marketing of these
products. Specifically, these companies
requested the creation of a voluntary
standard to: (1) Provide for appropriate
warnings and labels on packages of
these magnets sets; and (2) establish
guidelines for restricting the sale of
these magnet sets to children, by not
selling to stores that sell children’s
products exclusively, and advising
retailers not to sell the magnet sets in
proximity to children’s products. To
date, ASTM has not formed a committee
to consider the development of a
voluntary standard for magnet sets.
Moreover, whether such a voluntary
standard would be effective in reducing
or eliminating the risk of injury
associated with magnet sets is
questionable. Despite companies’
marketing and labeling their products in
an attempt to limit children’s exposure
to magnets, ingestion incidents
involving children have continued to
occur; and labeling does not change the
attractiveness of the product to children
or the intrinsic play value of the magnet
sets. From March 2010, when the firm
with the largest share of the market
undertook certain labeling
enhancements and marketing
restrictions, through June 2012, the
Commission learned of 47 additional
incidents of ingestion of magnets from
magnet sets, 26 of which involved
ingestion of that company’s magnets. As
discussed more fully in the next section
of this preamble, we do not believe that
warnings would adequately reduce the
injuries associated with magnet sets.
We also note that Zen Magnets has
announced its own ‘‘voluntary
standard’’ for magnet sets requiring that:
• Customers must be 18 years of age
or older to purchase magnets and that
the sales location must have an age floor
for persons 18 and older or 21 and
older, or age must be otherwise verified
by Government ID; and
• All stores must verbally remind
customers to keep magnets away from
mouths.
We do not consider a standard issued
by one company to be a ‘‘voluntary
standard’’ as that term is used in the
CPSA. Moreover, the measures that Zen
magnets announced would have the
same limitations discussed above.
3. Warnings
A possible alternative to the rule
would be to require warnings with or on
magnet sets. As discussed in the NPR
preamble and in response to comments
set forth in section E of this preamble,
it is unlikely that warnings on the
packages of magnet sets would
significantly reduce the ingestion-
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related injuries caused by high-powered
magnets. Safety and warnings literature
consistently identifies warnings as a less
effective hazard-control measure than
eliminating the hazard through design
or guarding the consumer from a hazard.
Warnings do not prevent consumer
exposure to the hazard but rely on
persuading consumers to alter their
behavior in some way to avoid the
hazard. With this product, warnings are
particularly unlikely to reduce or
eliminate the ingestion of these
magnets. Warnings are especially
unlikely to be effective among young
children because children may lack the
cognitive ability to appraise a hazard or
appreciate the consequences of their
own actions and may not understand
how to avoid hazards effectively.
Although older children are better at
appreciating the hazards described in a
warning, peer acceptance and social
influences can strongly influence
adolescent behavior. Because
adolescents have a tendency to test
limits and bend rules, warnings about
keeping the product away from children
could have the unintended effect of
making the product more appealing to
some children. For example, warnings
against specific uses, such as mimicking
piercings, might actually encourage this
behavior among older children. If
children repeatedly use the product in
this way, without ingesting the magnets,
these children most likely will become
convinced that the hazard is not
especially likely, or is not relevant to
them.
In the NPR, we noted that staff
generally found the content of warnings
accompanying magnet sets to be lacking
in several ways. For example, the
warnings often did not describe the
incident scenarios prevalent among
older children and adolescents, whom
caregivers may not believe are likely to
put magnets into their mouth. Warnings
lacked detailed information that would
allow consumers to understand how
swallowing magnets differs from
swallowing other small parts, or how
magnets sticking together could pose a
hazard because the magnets will not
simply pass through the child’s system.
Without a clear, explicit, and accurate
description of the nature of the hazard
and its consequences, consumers may
find the warning implausible. Moreover,
even with enhanced warnings,
consumers are unlikely to comply with
the action recommended in the warning.
Even if warnings could effectively
communicate the ingestion hazard, the
consequences of ingesting magnets, and
appropriate hazard-avoidance measures,
warnings still may not be effective if
consumers do not concur with the
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content of the warning. Warnings are
particularly likely to be ineffective
among caregivers of older children.
Unless caregivers are convinced that
their older child is likely to mimic lip,
nose, or similar piercings, or perform
other activities that might lead these
adolescents to place magnets into their
mouth or nose, caregivers may doubt
that the warnings are relevant to their
child, despite the warnings’ assertions
to the contrary.
As noted in the NPR preamble and in
section E of this preamble, even if
caregivers believe the warnings, several
factors may limit compliance.
Caregivers, particularly those with older
children, might feel significant social
pressure from children who are
accustomed to using the magnet sets.
Caregivers who own the product and
attempt to heed the warnings might find
it quite difficult to prevent their child’s
access to the magnets and still keep the
product reasonably accessible for their
own use.
The cost of compliance with warnings
for these products is high. Caregivers
may be reluctant to secure the product
from a child after every use. Identifying
an appropriate location to store the
magnet sets may dissuade consumers
from doing so, particularly for a product
often marketed to be for ‘‘stress relief.’’
Caregivers may underestimate their
child’s abilities and place the product in
locations that seem secure but that are
still accessible to the child. All of these
factors may lead caregivers to reject the
warning message.
Based on these concerns about the
likely ineffectiveness of warnings for
magnet sets, we do not believe that
warning labels would adequately reduce
the risk of injury presented by these
products.
4. Packaging Restrictions
Theoretically, magnet sets could be
sold with special storage containers to
reduce the likelihood that children
would access the magnets. Possible
storage might include a container that
would clearly indicate when a magnet is
missing from the set. Such a
requirement might prevent injuries
resulting from a small number of
magnets being separated from a set
without the owner being aware.
However, many consumers may not use
such containers because using them
could require time to gather the magnets
and put them in the container, or
consumers may be reluctant to
dismantle a shape or structure that took
them time and effort to construct. Thus,
the effectiveness of such special
containers to reduce ingestions is
doubtful. Finally, it is not clear that the
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Commission would have the regulatory
authority to issue a rule prescribing
requirements for packaging, other than
child-resistance requirements
(discussed below).
Another alternative might be to
require that magnet sets be sold in
child-resistant packaging. Childresistant packaging, also called ‘‘special
packaging,’’ is packaging that is
significantly difficult for children under
five years of age to open or obtain a
harmful amount of the substance. 15
U.S.C. 1471(4). The ability of such an
approach to reduce ingestion injuries of
magnets from magnet sets would be
limited. Child-resistant packaging
would not prevent teens and
adolescents (and even some younger
children) from opening the packaging.
Additionally, the packaging would have
to be secured after each use. According
to the Division of Human Factors, it is
unlikely that adults would accept childresistant packaging for a product like
the magnet sets because of the level of
inconvenience involved in returning the
magnets to the package.6 Additionally,
for the reasons described above,
consumers may leave magnets out of
their container.
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5. Restrictions on Sales of Magnet Sets
Another possible alternative to
address the hazard of children ingesting
magnets from magnet sets might be to
limit the places where magnet sets are
sold, keeping magnet sets away from toy
stores, children’s sections of stores, and
other such locations. Sales limitations
or requirements for strong warnings
might also be required on Web sites that
offer magnet sets for sale on the Internet.
However, these restrictions are unlikely
to reduce ingestions significantly
because children can access magnet sets
from many sources other than stores.
Moreover, sales restrictions are unlikely
to deter teens. Finally, the Commission
does not have the regulatory authority to
impose such sales restrictions by rule.
6. Adoption of a Standard With
Different Performance Requirements
Another alternative to the rule would
be to establish a different set of
requirements. For example, such
requirements might allow a different
flux index for magnet sets, different
specifications regarding shapes and
sizes of magnets within the scope of the
standard, or some other criteria that
have yet to be developed (but would not
be as stringent as the rule requires). If
6 Sedney,
C.A., & Smith, T.P. (2012). Human
factors assessment of strong magnet sets. CPSC
memorandum to Jonathan D. Midgett, Project
Manager, U.S. Consumer Product Safety
Commission, Bethesda, MD.
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different requirements would be
effective, they could reduce the risk of
injury associated with magnet sets, and
at the same time, potentially allow the
product to maintain the qualities that
would facilitate use by adults. It is
unclear, however, whether alternative
requirements for the sizes and flux
index of magnets would eliminate or
substantially affect the physical
qualities of the products that make them
enjoyable for adults.
A competing concern is whether an
alternative set of requirements could
reasonably be expected to reduce or
eliminate the risk of injury associated
with magnet sets. Because the hazard
presented by these magnet sets is
ingestion by children, we are concerned
that any requirements that allow
magnets with a greater attractive force
and permit sizes or shapes that could fit
through the small parts cylinder would
not address the risk of injury
adequately.
As noted in Section E, some
commenters suggest that, as an
alternative to the rule, the Commission
could require manufacturers to add an
aversive (bittering) agent to the product.
However, as discussed in the response
to Comment 18, aversives are unlikely
to be effective in deterring initial
ingestion by young children because
children frequently ingest unpalatable
substances.
7. No Action
Another option for the Commission is
to take no regulatory action to address
the risk of injury posed by magnet sets.
As the NPR preamble mentioned, it is
possible that, over time, increased
awareness of the hazard could result in
some reduction in ingestions. The
magnitude of any such reduction in
incidents is uncertain. The Commission
could rely entirely on enforcement
activities, rather than regulatory action,
to address the risk of injury posed by
magnet sets. However, as discussed in
the ‘‘voluntary recall’’ section above,
several manufacturers/importers of
magnet sets have refused to participate
in any recall or stop sale of their
products; and in any event, recalls and/
or stop sales conducted by these
companies would not prevent new
entrants into the market in the future.
H. Final Regulatory Analysis
The Commission is issuing this rule
under sections 7 and 9 of the CPSA. The
CPSA requires that the Commission
prepare a final regulatory analysis and
publish the final regulatory analysis
with the text of the final rule. 15 U.S.C.
2058(f). This section of the preamble
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presents the final regulatory analysis of
the rule.
1. Need for and Description of the Rule
The CPSC has received information
regarding injuries with, and hazards
posed by, sets of small, powerful
magnets. Some of these injuries have
required surgical removal of individual
magnets originally contained in the sets
and ultimately ingested by children.
Reported magnet ingestions have ranged
from young children, who put the
magnets in their mouths, to adolescents
and teens, who experimented with the
sensation of magnets (e.g., on their
braces), or paired magnets to mimic
tongue or lip piercings. These behaviors
have led to the accidental swallowing of
the powerful magnets, with unexpected,
and sometimes severe, medical
consequences, including significant
damage to the gastrointestinal tract
(Inkster, 2012) and death. From January
1, 2009 through December 31, 2013,
there were an estimated 2,900 possible
magnet set, emergency departmenttreated ingestions. There was also one
fatal incident in 2013 (Garland, 2014).
The final rule establishes a standard
limiting the size and strength of magnets
in a magnet set. The rule applies to any
aggregation of separable, magnetic
objects that is a consumer product
intended, marketed, or commonly used
as a manipulative or construction item
for entertainment, such as puzzle
working, sculpture building, mental
stimulation, or stress relief.7 Under the
rule, magnet sets would not comply
with the standard if: (1) The individual
magnets are small enough to fit into the
small parts cylinder (e.g., a ball-shaped
magnet with a diameter of less than 31.7
mm, or 1.25 inches); and (2) the
individual magnets have a flux index of
more than 50 kG2 mm2, as measured by
the procedures for determining the flux
index described in the toy standard.
Because these requirements already
apply to magnets used in products
marketed as toys for children, the rule
essentially extends the toy requirements
to the subject magnet sets.
The current designs of magnet sets
containing small powerful magnets of
the type that are the subject of this
regulatory proceeding (which are
typically comprised of individual ballshaped magnets with diameters of 5mm
and, based on testing by CPSC staff,
having flux index values in the range of
400–500) would not meet the
7 Although the definition of ‘‘magnet set’’
changed slightly from the NPR, and the rule extends
to the individual magnets sold for use as or with
a magnet set, these changes did not affect the scope
of products considered in conducting the Final
Regulatory Analysis.
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requirements of the standard. To meet
the requirements, the individual
magnets would have to be much weaker
(i.e., have a flux index of 50 kG2 mm2
or less, rather than an index of 400 to
500); or the magnets would have to be
much larger (i.e., be at least 31.7 mm
(1.25 inches) in diameter rather than 5
mm). Either requirement eliminates a
distinctive product attribute and would
limit greatly the magnet sets as
candidates for manipulative novelty
products. Magnets with a flux index of
50 kG2 mm2 or less may be too weak for
building sculptures or too weak to be
used in other construction activities;
magnets with diameters of 1.25 inches
or more would be too large to have any
practical value in such activities.
Staff has identified magnet sets in the
market, Liberty Balls, marketed by
Assemble, LLC, that would meet the
definition of magnet sets, would meet
the performance standard, and might
serve some of the uses of magnet sets
that would not meet the standard. The
Liberty Balls magnet sets consist of a set
of eight large ball-shaped magnets. The
Liberty Balls magnet sets consist of a set
of eight large ball-shaped magnets
selling for $30 to $40 per set. The Ball
of Rights generally consists of a set of
two large ball-shaped magnets selling
for $10 to $13 per set. The balls in these
sets are 33 mm (1.3 inches) in diameter,
and consist of ferrite magnets, rather
than rare earth materials (See https://
unitedweball.org/, accessed February
25, 2014).
Even though these products satisfy
the performance requirements of the
rule, for purposes of the economic
analysis, we do not consider any
impacts due to the entry of Liberty Balls
and Ball of Rights in the market because
we do not consider these sets to be good
substitutes for the subject magnet sets.
To be considered a good or close
substitute, we would need to observe
that consumers, who would have
purchased the subject magnet sets (if
they had remained available at
historical prices and quantities) are
now, to a large degree, purchasing the
Liberty Balls sets instead, and the
available data suggest otherwise.8
8 Sales of Liberty Balls have not come close to
matching the levels observed for the subject magnet
sets (estimated at 800,000 sets and $20 million
annually, and discussed below). Based upon
available information, sales revenue for Liberty
Balls appears to have amounted to about $200,000
during October and November 2013, or about
$100,000 per month. (See https://unitedweball.org/,
accessed February 25, 2014). By March 2014,
reported sales revenue from Liberty Balls had
increased to about $250,000 (Helm, 2014),
suggesting that for December 2013 through February
2014, sales were only about $15,000 (($250,000–
$200,000)/3) per month. By comparison, monthly
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Moreover, Liberty Balls magnet sets are
not marketed as a substitute for the
smaller and powerful neodymium
magnets sets. Rather, Liberty Balls
apparently have been sold specifically
to generate funds to defend the producer
against the recently settled lawsuit with
the CPSC (Helm, 2014).
Rather than develop a complying
alternative that serves the same niche as
the subject magnet sets, producers of
magnet sets have opted to exit the
market altogether. Although Liberty
Balls comply with the standard, we base
the benefit cost analysis presented
below on the disappearance of the
noncompliant magnet sets containing
small powerful magnets from the
market.
2. Description of the Product and
Market
Magnet sets that would be affected by
the scope of the rule are comprised of
small, powerful magnetic balls, cubes,
and/or cylinders that can be arranged in
many different geometric shapes. These
magnet sets were introduced in 2008,
but 2009 marked the first year with
significant sales to U.S. consumers.9
Most magnet sets have been sold in sets
of either 125 balls or sets of 216 to 224
balls; although some firms have sold
just a few balls as extras or
replacements, others have sold large sets
of more than 1,000 magnetic balls.
Product information provided by
marketers indicates that the most
common magnet size is approximately 5
millimeters in diameter; although balls
as small as about 3 millimeters have
been sold, in addition to sets of larger
magnet balls (perhaps 15 millimeters to
25 millimeters in diameter).10 In
addition to magnetic ball sets, sets of
small magnetic cubes have also been
sold, although magnetic cubes have
comprised a relatively small share of the
market. In 2012, the leading marketer of
magnet sets also added to its desk toy
product line small magnetic rods
intended to be used with magnetic balls
to make geometric shapes.
Based on information reviewed on
product sales, including reports by firms
provided to the Office of Compliance
and Field Operations, the number of
such magnet sets that were sold to U.S.
consumers from 2009 through mid-2012
sales for the subject magnet sets were about $1.7
million on average. (CPSC staff conducted no
independent evaluation of the accuracy of these
figures for Liberty Balls.)
9 However, small neodymium-iron-boron magnets
previously have been, and continue to be, marketed
by firms such as magnet suppliers and distributors
of educational products.
10 One firm’s larger magnet balls are reportedly
made with cores of strontium ferrite (SrO·6Fe2O3),
rather than neodymium-iron-boron.
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may have totaled about 2.7 million sets,
with a value of roughly $50 million.
This value reflects a combination of
retail sales directly to consumers
(through company Web sites and other
Internet retail sites) and sales to retailers
who marketed the products. A review of
retail prices reported by importers, and
observed on Internet sites during that
period, suggested prices typically
ranging from about $20 to $45 per set,
with an average price of about $25.
Larger sets of more than 1,000
individual magnets reportedly were sold
at prices as high as $300, depending on
the number of magnets and the type of
packaging. Such larger sets only
accounted for about 0.5 percent of all
sets (and a little over 2 percent of all
magnets) sold to consumers during the
period from 2009 to mid-2012.
The small, powerful magnets to be
affected by the rule are made of alloys
of neodymium, iron, boron, or other rare
earth metals. This composition has been
confirmed in analyses of product
samples by CPSC staff from the
Directorate for Laboratory Sciences. The
magnetized neodymium-iron-boron
cores are coated with a variety of metals
and other materials to make them more
attractive to consumers and to protect
the brittle magnetic alloy materials from
breaking, chipping, and corroding.
Nearly 100 percent of neodymium and
other rare earth metals are now mined
in China, which also reportedly holds
close to a worldwide monopoly on the
production of neodymium-iron-boron
magnets (Dent, 2012). Based on
available information, all of the small
magnets used in magnet sets, as well as
most of the finished and packaged
products that would be subject to CPSC
regulation, are produced by
manufacturers located in China.11
a. Importers of Magnet Sets
As noted above, none of the magnets
found in sets that are within the scope
of the rule are produced domestically.
Nearly all of the firms that have
marketed magnet sets are believed to
have imported them packaged and
labeled for sale to U.S. consumers.
Several Chinese manufacturers have the
facilities and production capacity to
meet the orders of U.S. importers.
The Directorate for Economic
Analysis identified about 25 U.S. firms
and individuals who imported magnet
sets for sale in the United States in
2012. The combined sales of the top
seven firms have probably accounted for
11 One importer reported to a CPSC Compliance
investigator that some of the magnet sets it sold and
shipped to U.S. consumers were made from bulk
magnets received from its supplier in China that the
importer packaged for sale.
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the great majority (perhaps more than
98%) of units sold since the product
was introduced in 2008. One firm,
Maxfield & Oberton Holdings, LLC, is
believed to have held a dominant
position in the market for magnet sets
from its entry in the market in 2009,
until it ceased operations late in 2012.
That firm, and a few of the larger firms
(including a firm based in Canada with
a branch office in the United States),
have marketed the products through
accounts with retailers, in addition to
selling directly to consumers on the
Internet, using their own Web sites or
other Internet shopping sites.
Some of the firms with smaller sales
volumes reported to Compliance staff
that they mainly marketed products
(sourced from manufacturers in China)
through Internet sales arrangements
with Amazon.com, which held stock for
them and processed orders. A review of
the product listings of the Internet
retailer found that several other firms
had similar business models. Other U.S.
firms and individuals have sold magnet
sets they imported from China through
Internet ‘‘stores’’ they maintain on eBay.
In addition to products offered for sale
by U.S. importers, consumers have also
been able to purchase magnet sets
directly from sources in Hong Kong or
China, many of which marketed
products through ‘‘stores’’ on eBay.12
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b. Market Disruption Related to Other
CPSC Actions on Magnet Sets
CPSC Compliance staff contacted 13
magnet set importers for corrective
actions before the Commission
published the NPR.13 At staff’s request
in July 2012, 10 firms agreed to stop the
manufacture, importation, distribution,
and sale of high-powered, manipulative
magnetic products of the types that
would be subject to the rule. Three other
firms did not stop selling the products
(although one of these firms initially
had agreed to cease sales voluntarily).
The Commission voted to initiate
administrative actions seeking a
determination that certain magnet sets
are a substantial product hazard, along
with an order requiring the firms that
import these products cease sales and
offer refunds to customers.14 The three
12 More than 40 such stores shipping magnet sets
directly from Hong Kong or China were identified
in a brief review of product offerings on the Internet
site in 2012.
13 Although other importers were identified, these
other importers were believed to sell so few magnet
sets that staff did not have the resources to pursue
these matters on a case-by-case basis against all
known importers. Thus, targeting for corrective
actions was limited to 13 firms believed to account
for the largest portion of the market.
14 For example, see the December 19, 2012, CPSC
press release related to the administrative
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firms that have been subject to the
administrative complaints by the CPSC,
and the 10 firms that have agreed to stop
sales voluntarily, accounted for virtually
all sales of the products during the
period from 2009 to mid-2012.
Additionally, the largest importer of
magnet sets subject to the rule (one of
the three firms sued in administrative
complaints), Maxfield & Oberton
Holdings, LLC, announced that it ceased
operations, effective December 27, 2012.
Another of the three firms sued in
administrative complaints, Star
Networks USA, LLC, agreed to stop
further sales of magnet sets in July 2014,
leaving just one major magnet set
importer, Zen Magnets, LLC. As a result
of these actions and events, sales of the
subject magnet sets currently are
dramatically lower than they were at the
time of the enforcement actions.
3. Evaluation of the Rule
a. Societal Costs and the Potential
Benefits
i. Estimated Societal Costs of Injuries
The purpose of the final rule is to
prevent serious intestinal injuries that
can result when children ingest two or
more of the magnets from a subject
magnet set (or one magnet and another
metallic object). The final rule would
establish a standard for magnet sets and
individual magnets that are marketed or
intended for use as parts of a magnet set.
Distributing magnet sets and individual
magnets intended for magnet sets that
do not meet specified requirements
would be prohibited. Therefore, a
reduction in injuries would be the
resulting benefit of the rule.
Baseline. Our analysis of the potential
benefits of the rule focuses on injuries
reported through the National Electronic
Injury Surveillance System (NEISS), a
probability sample of U.S. hospital
emergency departments that can be used
to provide national estimates of
product-related injuries initially treated
in U.S. hospital emergency departments.
The expected benefits of a product
safety regulation must be measured
against a baseline representing the best
assessment of how the market would
operate and how products would be
used in the absence of the intervention.
In the case of the rule prohibiting the
subject magnet sets, the baseline would
represent the time period before the
actions by which the CPSC: (1)
Requested that importers and retailers
stop selling the magnet sets; (2) initiated
administrative actions against importers
complaint filed against Star Networks (https://
www.cpsc.gov/en/Newsroom/News-Releases/2013/
CPSC-Sues-Star-Networks-USA-Over-HazardousHigh-Powered-Magnetic-Balls-and-Cubes/).
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that refused to stop selling the magnet
sets (each of which seeks an order
directing the importer to offer refunds in
exchange for the return of purchased
magnet sets); (3) publicized corrective
actions, whereby certain importers and
retailers of magnet sets agreed to
provide refunds to consumers in
exchange for the return of purchased
magnet sets; and (4) issued warnings to
the public regarding the grave dangers
that the subject magnet sets posed to
children. Because CPSC compliance
actions have significantly altered the
state of the market, the environment
before these actions occurred represents
the best approximation of how the
market would have operated in the
absence of CPSC intervention and is the
appropriate reference baseline for
evaluating the impact of the rule.
Consequently, although the Directorate
for Epidemiology’s hazard analysis
described injuries involving magnets
that occurred from 2009 through
December 2013 (Garland, 2014), our
analysis will be limited to the period
from 2009 through June 2012, before the
request to stop sales, administrative
actions, recalls, and public warnings
ensued.
Based on a review of incident
narratives coded from emergency
department medical records for magnet
ingestion cases obtained from NEISS
hospitals, the Directorate for
Epidemiology staff has identified 86
ingestions of high-powered and/or ballshaped magnets, which occurred from
2009 through June 2012. These
incidents were determined to involve,
or possibly involve, the magnets of
interest. Although manufacturer or
brand name information is rarely
available in the medical records
extracted for NEISS, nine of the 86
NEISS-reported cases (10.5%)
mentioned a brand name of magnet sets
that are the magnets of interest; 77 cases
(89.5%) were determined possibly to
have involved the magnets of interest
because the case narratives included
terms such as ‘‘high powered,’’
‘‘magnetic ball,’’ ‘‘magnetic marble,’’
‘‘BB size magnet,’’ or ‘‘magnetic beads’’
(Garland, 2014).
Injuries and Societal Costs. Based on
the 86 NEISS-reported magnet cases,
there were an estimated 2,138 injuries
treated in U.S. hospital emergency
departments from 2009 through June
2012. About 11 percent of these NEISSreported cases were injuries requiring
hospitalization, as opposed to the 89
percent that were treated and released.
The benefits of the rule can be estimated
as the reduction in the societal costs
associated with the injuries that would
be prevented by the rule. The
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Directorate for Economic Analysis bases
estimates of the societal costs of
emergency department-treated magnet
injuries on the CPSC’s Injury Cost
Model (ICM) (Miller et al., 2000).
The ICM is fully integrated with
NEISS and provides estimates of the
societal costs of injuries reported
through NEISS. The major aggregated
components of the ICM include:
medical costs; work losses; and the
intangible costs associated with lost
quality of life or pain and suffering.15
Medical costs include three categories
of expenditure: (1) Medical and hospital
costs associated with treating the injury
victim during the initial recovery period
and in the long run, the costs associated
with corrective surgery, the treatment of
chronic injuries, and rehabilitation
services; (2) ancillary costs, such as
costs for prescriptions, medical
equipment, and ambulance transport;
and (3) costs of health insurance claims
processing. Cost estimates for these
expenditure categories were derived
from a number of national and state
databases, including the National
Healthcare Cost and Utilization
Project—National Inpatient Sample and
the Medical Expenditure Panel Survey,
both sponsored by the Agency for
Healthcare Research and Quality.
Work loss estimates, based on
information from the National Health
Interview Survey and the U.S. Bureau of
Labor Statistics, as well as a number of
published wage studies, include: (1) The
forgone earnings of parents and visitors,
including lost wage work and
household work, (2) imputed long term
work losses of the victim that would be
associated with permanent impairment,
and (3) employer productivity losses,
such as the costs incurred when
employers spend time juggling
schedules or training replacement
workers. The earnings estimates were
updated most recently with weekly
earnings data from the Current
Population Survey conducted by the
Bureau of the Census in conjunction
with the Bureau of Labor Statistics.
Intangible, or non-economic, costs of
injury reflect the physical and
emotional trauma of injury as well as
the mental anguish of victims and
caregivers. Intangible costs are difficult
to quantify because they do not
represent products or resources traded
in the marketplace. Nevertheless, they
typically represent the largest
component of injury cost and need to be
accounted for in any benefit-cost
analysis involving health outcomes
(Rice et al., 1989). The Injury Cost
Model develops a monetary estimate of
these intangible costs from jury awards
for pain and suffering. While these
awards can vary widely on a case-bycase basis, studies have shown them to
be systematically related to a number of
factors, including economic losses, the
type and severity of injury, and the age
of the victim (Viscusi, 1988; Rodgers,
1993). Estimates for the Injury Cost
Model were derived from a regression
analysis of about 2,000 jury awards in
nonfatal product liability cases
involving consumer products compiled
by Jury Verdicts Research, Inc.
In addition to estimating the costs of
injuries treated in U.S. hospital
emergency departments and reported
through NEISS, the Injury Cost Model
uses empirical relationships between
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emergency department injuries and
those treated in other settings (e.g.,
physicians’ offices, clinics, ambulatory
surgery centers, and direct hospital
admissions) to estimate the number,
types, and costs of injuries treated
outside of hospital emergency
departments (Miller et al., 2000;
Lawrence, 2013). Thus, the Injury Cost
Model allows us to expand on NEISS by
combining (1) the number and costs of
emergency department injuries with (2)
the number and costs of medically
attended injuries treated in other
settings to estimate the total number of
medically attended injuries and their
costs across all treatment levels.
Table 1 below provides annual
estimates of the injuries and the societal
costs associated with ‘‘high-powered
and/or ball-shaped magnet ingestions’’
that involve, or possibly involve, the
magnets that are the subject of the rule.
As shown in Table 1, the 2009 through
June 2012 NEISS estimates suggest an
estimated annual average of about 610
emergency department-treated injuries,
including 544 injuries that were treated
and released and 66 injuries that
required hospitalization. About 60
percent of these emergency departmenttreated ingestions involved children
ages 4 through 12 years. Just over half
of the magnet cases from the emergency
departments of the hospitals that
comprise the NEISS sample appear to
have involved the ingestion of more
than one magnet. Additionally, based on
estimates from the ICM, there were
another 319 injuries treated annually in
locations other than hospital emergency
departments.16
TABLE 1—ESTIMATED AVERAGE ANNUAL MEDICALLY ATTENDED INJURIES AND ASSOCIATED SOCIETAL COSTS FOR HIGHPOWERED AND/OR BALL-SHAPED MAGNET INGESTIONS THAT WERE DETERMINED TO INVOLVE, OR POSSIBLY INVOLVE, THE MAGNETS OF INTEREST, 2009–JUNE 2012
Estimated
number
Injury disposition
Estimated
societal costs
($ millions) *
Treated and Released from Hospital Emergency Department (NEISS) .................................................................
Admitted to Hospital Through the Emergency Department (NEISS) ......................................................................
544
† 66
11.4
8.6
Medically Treated Outside of Hospital Emergency Department (ICM) ............................................................
Total Medically Attended Injuries ............................................................................................................................
319
929
8.6
28.6
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* In 2012 dollars.
† According to the Directorate for Epidemiology, the estimated number of hospital-admitted, emergency department-treated injuries is a not a
reliable estimate because of the small number of cases upon which the estimate was based.
After including the injuries treated
outside of hospital emergency
departments, there was an estimated
annual average of about 929 medically
attended injuries involving ingestions of
the magnets of interest. Based on the
ICM, these injuries resulted in annual
societal costs of about $28.6 million (in
2012 dollars) during the 2009 to June
2012 time period. The injury cost
estimates differ from those presented in
the preliminary regulatory analysis
15 A detailed description of the cost components,
and the general methodology and data sources used
to develop the CPSC’s Injury Cost Model, can be
found in Miller et al. (2000).
16 Although no deaths were reported during the
baseline time period for this analysis, one death
involving the subject magnets was reported in 2013.
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because of an expansion of the baseline
time period from 2009 through 2011 to
2009 through June 2012 and because of
updates to the CPSC’s Injury Cost Model
(Lawrence, 2013). The injury cost
estimates were also inflated from 2011
to 2012 dollars.
The average estimated societal costs
per injury was about $27,000 for injuries
treated in locations other than
emergency departments (such as
physicians’ offices, clinics, ambulatory
surgery centers, or direct hospital
admissions); about $21,000 for injuries
that were treated and released from
emergency departments; and about
$130,000 for injuries that required
admission to the hospital for treatment.
Medical costs and work losses
(including work losses of caregivers)
accounted for about 30 percent of these
injury cost estimates, and the less
tangible costs of injury associated with
pain and suffering accounted for about
70 percent of the estimated injury costs.
Uncertainty. As noted in the
preliminary regulatory analysis, there is
uncertainty concerning these estimates.
Some of the cases described as
involving the magnets of interest that
were included in Table 1 may not have
involved the magnets that are the
subject of the rule. As noted above,
about 90 percent of the cases upon
which the table was based were
described as only possibly involving the
magnets of interest because NEISS
narratives are not required to list
manufacturer or brand name. Hence, it
is possible that Table 1 overstates the
societal costs associated with the
magnets that would be included in the
rule.
On the other hand, in addition to the
magnet cases upon which the table was
based, there were also 230 NEISS cases
(representing about 1,526 emergency
department-treated injuries annually),
in which the magnet type was classified
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as ‘‘unknown or other.’’ These cases
included narratives that mentioned that
a magnet was involved but presented
insufficient information to classify the
magnet type. Consequently, to the
extent that the unknown magnet types
involved magnets that would be covered
by the rule, the Table 1 results would
tend to understate the societal costs
associated with the magnets subject to
the rule.
ii. Estimated Benefits of the Rule
As noted above, the benefits of the
magnet rule would be the reduction in
the societal costs of the injuries that
would be prevented. Because the rule
will eliminate from the market all
magnet sets involved in the ingestion
injuries described above, all injuries
that would have occurred in the absence
of a rule would be prevented. Although
no deaths involving magnet sets
occurred during the time period covered
by our analysis, we know of a magnet
set related fatality that occurred in 2013.
Thus, we anticipate that the rule would
prevent future fatalities as well as
injuries. However, if children,
adolescents, and teens cannot play with
or use the prohibited magnets, they
could play with or use substitute
products (including high-powered
magnets intended for other uses 17) that
also may result in injury. Hence, the
overall benefits of the rule should be
measured as the net reduction in
injuries and the concomitant reduction
in societal costs that would result.
Based on the injury estimates presented
in Table 1, and given the absence of
information on expected use and risks
17 Common commercial and industrial
applications of small neodymium-iron-boron
magnets include their use in holding systems,
motors (DC, servo, linear, and voice coil), magnetic
bearings, magnetic couplings, jewelry, welding
clamps, oil filters, disc drives, loudspeakers,
headphones, microphones, instrumentation,
switches, and relays.
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of alternative products or activities, the
expected benefits of the rule might
amount to about $28.6 million annually.
b. Potential Costs of the Rule
Both consumers and producers
benefit from the production and sale of
consumer products. The consuming
public obtains the use value or ‘‘utility’’
associated with the consumption of
products; producers obtain income and
profits from the production and sale of
products. Consequently, the costs of a
rule that eliminates certain magnetic
sets would consist of: (1) The lost use
value experienced by consumers who
would no longer be able to purchase
magnets that do not meet the standard
at any price; and (2) the lost income and
profits to firms that could not produce
and sell non-complying products in the
future. The same baseline used in the
benefits assessment, 2009 to June 2012,
is used for the cost analysis.
i. Lost Utility to Consumers
First, consider the lost utility to
consumers. We cannot estimate in any
precise way the use value that
consumers receive from these products,
but we can describe use value
conceptually. In general, use value
includes the amount of: (1) Consumer
expenditures for the product, plus (2)
what is called ‘‘consumer surplus.’’ In
the case of the magnet sets, given sales
of about 800,000 sets annually during
the 2009 to June 2012 time period, and
assuming an average retail price of
about $25 in 2012, consumer
expenditures would amount to about
$20 million annually in 2012 dollars.
These expenditures represent the
minimum value that consumers would
expect to get from these products. It is
represented by the area of the rectangle
OBDE in the standard supply and
demand graph below, where B equals
$25, and E equals 800,000 units.
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18 The concept of consumer surplus is discussed
in OMB’s Circular A–4 (OMB, 2003) and has been
applied in several CPSC staff analyses, including
Tohamy (2006) and Rodgers (2004).
19 If the above graph represents the market for
tickets, the demand curve describes the quantity of
tickets demanded at each price (i.e., the quantity of
tickets consumers are willing and able to purchase
at each price). In this example, the $150 that the
consumer would have been willing to pay for the
ticket is represented on the demand curve at a point
to the left of point D. The consumer surplus is given
by the relevant point on the demand curve (i.e.,
where price = $150), minus the market clearing
price of $100.
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represented by the area of the trapezoid
OCDE. However, the prospective loss in
use value associated with the rule,
which would prohibit certain magnet
sets that do not comply with the rule,
would amount to, at most, the area of
the triangle representing the consumer
surplus. This is because consumers
would no longer be able to obtain utility
from the prohibited product, but they
would, nevertheless, still have the $20
million (represented by the rectangle
OBDE) that they would have spent on
magnet sets in the absence of a rule.
Although consumers would no longer
be able to purchase magnet sets, which
would have been their first choice, they
can use this money to buy other
products providing use value.
We have no information regarding
aggregate consumer surplus; and hence,
no information on the amount of utility
that would be lost from a magnet set
rule. Although the magnet sets clearly
provide ‘‘utility’’ to purchasers, magnet
sets are not necessities. Consequently,
the demand for magnet sets is probably
not price inelastic, a factor that would
tend to reduce estimates of utility
losses.20 Additionally, if the magnetic
20 To say that the demand for a product is price
‘‘inelastic’’ means that the quantity demanded tends
to be insensitive to changes in the price of the
product. Gasoline is an example of a product with
an inelastic demand. Consumers are not likely to
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sets are ‘‘faddish,’’ they may not be the
type of product that will be used
intensely by consumers over long
periods of time. However, if, for
example, consumers who purchased the
magnetic sets at an average price of $25
would have been willing to spend, on
average, $35 per set, the lost utility from
the magnet sets might amount to about
$8 million on an annual basis (i.e.,
[$35¥$25] × 800,000 units annually).
Finally, we note that the loss in
consumer surplus just described
represents the maximum loss of
consumer utility from the rule; the
actual loss is likely to be lower. This is
because consumers are likely to gain
some amount of consumer surplus from
products that are purchased as an
alternative to those magnet sets that
would no longer be available because of
the rule. If, for example, there were
close substitutes for the magnet sets that
do not meet the standard (e.g., desk toys
that are almost as satisfying and
similarly priced), the overall loss in
consumer surplus (and, hence, the costs
of the rule) would probably tend to be
small. On the other hand, if there are no
close substitutes, the costs of the rule
would tend to be higher.
reduce substantially their purchase of gasoline (at
least in the short run), even if the price increases
substantially.
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The consumer surplus is given by the
area of the triangle BCD under the
graph’s demand function and represents
the difference between the market
clearing price and the maximum
amount consumers would have been
willing to pay for the product. This
consumer surplus will vary for
individual consumers, but it represents
a benefit to consumers over and above
what they had to pay (McCloskey,
1982).18 For example, although tickets
to a concert or football game might sell
for $100 each, some consumers who buy
them for $100 would have been willing
to pay $150 per ticket. In other words,
they paid $100 and received benefits
that they value at $150. Hence, each of
these consumers would receive a
consumer surplus of $50.19
In general, the use value of the magnet
sets obtained by consumers is
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Some alternative products might serve
some of the same uses of the subject
magnet sets. For example, consider the
Liberty Balls mentioned earlier, which
are comprised of large (1.3 inch) ferrite
magnetic objects. Their size, weight, and
relatively high price per ball make
Liberty Balls unsuitable and impractical
for use in most sculpturing and other
construction activities for which the
subject magnet sets are used. They
might still be used by some for
‘‘fidgeting,’’ but there does not seem to
be any unique attribute of this product
that would cause a consumer to
purchase Liberty Balls specifically for
fidgeting; common objects, such as
paper clips or ball bearings, could serve
the same fidgeting purpose at a lower
price.
Another possible alternative product
discussed by the Directorate for
Engineering Sciences (Amodeo, 2013)
could be magnet sets comprised of
individual magnets permanently
connected by rods or other means, such
that the resulting magnetic objects are
not small parts. Such sets are marketed
as children’s toys because the
individual pieces in the set do not fit
into the small parts cylinder. Although
these products have not been marketed
for adults, and we have no evidence that
they could be considered a good
substitute for the subject magnet sets, if
such sets could satisfy some consumers’
needs in constructing geometric shapes,
then the lost consumer surplus might be
reduced.
Notwithstanding the availability of
alternatives to the subject magnet sets,
the rule will still result in some level of
lost utility. By purchasing the products
in question, rather than other products,
consumers are revealing that they have
a preference for the subject magnet sets
that they believe are likely to provide
them more utility than a substitute
purchase.
costs that vary with the level of output
and usually include expenditures for
raw materials, wages, distribution of the
product, and the like.21
In Figure 1, total revenue is given by
the area OBDE, which is simply the
product of sales and price. The total
variable costs of production are given by
the area under the supply function,
OADE. Consequently, producer surplus
is given by the triangle, ABD, which is
the area under the market clearing price
and above the supply function.
As described earlier, sales of the
magnet sets averaged roughly 800,000
sets annually during the 2009 through
mid-2012 time period, with an average
retail price of about $25 per set in 2012.
Thus, total industry revenues averaged
about $20 million annually (i.e., 800,000
sets × $25 per set) in 2012 dollars.
Additional information provided by
firms to the Office of Compliance and
Field Operations suggests that the
average import cost of the magnets to
U.S. importers, a major variable cost,
may have amounted to about $10 per
set, or an average of about $8 million
annually (i.e., 800,000 sets × $10 import
cost per set). We have no information on
other variable costs associated with the
production, packaging, marketing, and
distribution of the magnet sets.
However, it seems likely that variable
costs would constitute a significant
proportion of the remaining difference
between revenues ($20 million) and
import costs ($8 million). If we assume
that variable costs amount to about half
of the difference, lost producer surplus
would amount to about $6 million.22
ii. Lost Benefits to Producers
The lost benefits to firms resulting
from a rule that effectively eliminates a
product they produce are measured by
a loss in what is called producer
surplus. Producer surplus is a profit
measure that is somewhat analogous to
consumer surplus. Whereas consumer
surplus is a measure of benefits received
by individuals who consume products,
net of the cost of purchasing the
products, producer surplus is a measure
of the benefits accruing to firms that
produce and sell products, net of the
costs of producing them. More formally,
‘‘producer surplus’’ is defined as the
total revenue (TR) of firms selling the
magnet sets, less the total variable costs
(TVC) of production. Variable costs are
21 Note that although producer surplus (PS) is a
measure of profits, it is not the same as profits.
Whereas PS = TR¥TVC, profits (p) = TR¥(TFC +
TVC), where TFC represents total fixed costs (i.e.,
those costs borne by the firm regardless of the level
of output). If we substitute PS into the profit
equation, and rearrange terms, we have PS = p +
TFC. Thus, producer surplus is equal to profits,
plus total fixed costs. In the case of the market for
magnet sets, the fixed costs of production for
American importers are small. The magnet sets
were generally produced, packaged, and shipped
from China and sometimes sent directly to the
importer’s point of sale. Even when the magnet sets
were shipped directly to importers, most additional
costs incurred by importers, such as shipping and
marketing costs, would be considered variable.
Consequently, in the case of the market for magnet
sets, lost profits would be approximately equal to
lost producer surplus.
22 This value is lower than the value presented in
the preliminary regulatory analysis, due to the use
of more refined sales figures for the affected
producers.
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iii. Summary of Costs of the Rule
The costs of the rule, in terms of
reduced benefits for firms and lost
utility by consumers, are uncertain.
However, based on annual sales
estimates available for 2009 through
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mid-2012, these costs could amount to
as much as $6 million in lost producer
surplus and some unknown quantity of
lost utility. The estimate of lost
producer surplus differs from impacts
estimated in the NPR (7.5 million,
expressed as lost profits) because of a
revised estimate of annual sales, and
different assumptions regarding profit
rates and variable costs.
c. Sensitivity of Results to Product Life
Assumptions
Implicit in this analysis is the
assumption that the expected useful life
of the magnet sets is about 1 year.
Because this product has only been in
widespread consumer use since 2009,
this assumption is made without
extensive knowledge about the actual
use of the magnetic sets by consumers.
We consider magnet sets to be novelty
products, which means for many
consumers, they may lose much of their
appeal quite quickly. Accordingly, we
chose a one-year rather than a longer
useful life even though the magnets may
be physically durable products. Even if
some of the products remain in homes
or offices longer than a year, the risk of
ingestion by children may be much
higher in the first month or two after the
magnet sets are purchased, when the
appeal of the product is at its highest
and the consumer actively uses or plays
with the product frequently. Once
novelty products lose their appeal, they
are likely to be put away and stored
indefinitely or perhaps even discarded.
However, we note that the results of
our analysis are not particularly
sensitive to this product life
assumption. For example, had we
assumed that the average product life
was about 2 years, rather than 1 year,
estimates of the number of sets in use
at any given time would approximately
double, reducing the estimated annual
risk of injury, per magnet set in use (and
hence, reduce estimated societal costs
per set), by about half. However, this
reduced estimate of annual societal
costs would be offset by the fact that the
sets remain in use for 2 years, rather
than 1 year. Thus, annual benefits, per
magnet set in use, would be about
halved, but the present value of benefits
would be accrued over 2 years, rather
than 1 year. Consequently, even if we
had doubled the assumed product life,
the relationship between benefits and
costs would have remained roughly the
same. Estimated benefits would be
slightly lower under a two year useful
product life due to discounting second
year benefits.
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d. Alternatives to the Rule
There are several possible alternatives
to the rule. We are unable to quantify
either the costs or the benefits of these
alternatives, in part because the
requirements of such alternatives have
not been specified. To estimate the
potential costs of the alternatives, we
would need a precise description of
what the requirements would be.
Moreover, even with this information, it
would still be difficult to determine the
expected injury reduction from the
various alternatives.
Nevertheless, the costs of each of the
alternatives discussed below are
expected to be substantially lower than
the costs of the rule. This is because,
generally speaking, the alternatives
would allow consumers and businesses
to continue buying, selling, and using
the magnet sets that would no longer be
available under the rule. Similarly, the
benefits of these alternatives, in terms of
injury reduction, would also be
expected to be lower than the benefits
for the rule. This is because, under these
alternatives, some children would
continue to have access to the magnet
sets.
The Commission may not have
authority for some of the alternatives
discussed. None of the alternatives was
chosen because the expected injury
reduction from each was believed to
address the hazard inadequately.
Comments on the NPR did not alter this
decision.
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i. Alternative Performance
Requirements
As an alternative to the rule, the
Commission could consider
promulgating an alternative set of
requirements that could reduce the risk
of injury from magnet sets but not
necessarily eliminate the risk. For
example, some alternatives to the rule
might include: Setting a different flux
index for the magnets sold as
manipulative desk sets; requiring
different specifications for shapes and
sizes of magnets within the scope of the
standard; or setting forth some other
criteria that have not yet been
developed (but are not as stringent as in
the final rule). If these alternative
requirements led to the production of
magnet sets with physical
characteristics that appealed to
consumers, the cost of the rule for both
consumers and businesses would be
reduced. Businesses would continue to
be able to produce and sell magnet sets,
and consumers would continue to be
able to buy and use them. However,
these alternative requirements would
likely reduce the benefits of a rule:
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Magnets that present a risk of harm
would still be available and some
children would undoubtedly have
access to them and be injured by them.
One practical question, however, is
whether alternative requirements for the
sizes and flux index of magnets would
eliminate or substantially affect the
physical qualities of the products that
make them enjoyable for adults.
Regarding the alternative size
requirements, consumers can use
magnet sets of 216 or more 5mm balls
to make a variety of constructions.
Larger individual magnets that would
meet an alternative (that is smaller than
the 1.25-inch diameter specified in the
final rule) might be determined to
reduce the risk associated with
ingestions somewhat, but, depending
upon their size, might make them
unsuitable for many of the uses of the
sets with smaller magnets.
Similarly, allowing a flux index
greater than the 50 kG2 mm2 flux limit
of the rule might improve the usefulness
of the magnet sets in construction
activities. However, given that the
subject magnet sets have flux index
values typically in the range of 400–500
for spherical magnets, the flux index
limit might have to be increased
substantially higher than the flux index
limit of 50 kG2 mm2 to provide levels
of satisfaction that are similar to those
of the subject magnet sets. Moreover, a
flux index limit of substantially more
than 50 kG2 mm2 could, relative to the
proposed rule, substantially increase the
harms associated with the ingestion
risk—the harms the rule is intended to
prevent.
Another alternative might be to create
specifications for the application of
bittering agents on the magnets to make
them less appealing to young children.
However, the effectiveness of bittering
agents in reducing magnet ingestions is
questionable (Sedney & Smith, 2012).
Neither the costs, nor the benefits of
these alternative sets of requirements
are quantifiable with available
information. The staff is reasonably
certain that magnets with a flux index
of less than 50 kG2 mm2 will
substantially reduce the risk injury.
However, the risk associated with flux
indices greater than 50 kG2 mm2 but less
than the indices of 400 to 500 for the
subject magnet sets are unknown and
cannot be estimated with available data.
The staff is also reasonably certain that
the risk of ingesting magnets is
substantially reduced if the magnets are
too large for the small parts container.
However, the increased risk of ingestion
with smaller sized magnets is unknown.
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Require Safer Packaging
The Commission could require
magnet sets to be sold with special
storage containers that are fitted to the
product so that consumers would be
able to determine whether any of the
magnets were missing from the sets.
Such a requirement might prevent
injuries resulting from a small number
of magnets being separated from a set
without the owner being aware. In
reality, however, many consumers may
not use such containers because using
them could require time to form the
magnets into a shape, such as a cube; or
consumers might wish to keep the
magnets out of their container to
preserve a shape or structure that took
time and effort to construct.
Alternatively (or in combination), the
Commission could require the magnets
to be sold in child-resistant packaging.
The benefit of such an approach is the
potential to reduce ingestion injuries.
However, the benefits of this approach
would be limited. Child-resistant
packaging would not prevent teens and
adolescents (and even some younger
children) from opening the packaging.
Additionally, the packaging would have
to be secured after each use. According
to the Division of Human Factors, it is
unlikely that adults would accept childresistant packaging for a product like
the magnet sets because of the level of
inconvenience involved in returning the
magnets to the package (Sedney &
Smith, 2012). Additionally, for the
reasons described above, consumers
may leave magnets out of their
container.
The costs of this alternative would
depend upon the packaging
requirements but would be substantially
less costly than the rule, which
eliminates the subject magnet sets from
the marketplace. It seems unlikely that
the costs would amount to more than a
dollar or so per magnet set, although
these costs might be somewhat higher if
child-resistant packaging was required.
The benefits of requiring safer packaging
are unknown, but based on the HF
discussion above, the benefits may be
relatively small if consumers would not
use the packaging containers
appropriately.
ii. Warnings
The Commission could require strong
warnings on labels and on-product
instructions designed to prevent the use
of the magnet sets by children. Based on
HF staff’s examination, the ingestion
warnings that currently accompany
magnet sets are generally aimed at
adults, but the warnings are deficient in
their content. For example, some
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warnings caution against children
swallowing the magnets, but the
warnings do not describe the incident
scenarios. Some warnings refer to the
propensity of swallowed magnets to
stick to intestines, without referring to
the presence of other magnets or metal
objects. Other warnings refer to magnets
sticking together or attaching to other
metallic objects inside the body, but the
warnings do not explain that the
magnets can attract through the walls of
the intestines and forcefully compress
these tissues, resulting in serious
injuries. According to HF staff, without
detailed information in the warnings,
consumers may not really understand
how swallowing magnets differs from
swallowing other small parts or how
magnets sticking together could pose a
hazard.
HF staff believes that it may be
possible to develop warnings that could
communicate the ingestion hazard, the
consequences of ingestion, and how to
avoid the hazard. To the extent that the
subject magnets present a ‘‘hidden’’
hazard about which consumers are
unaware, explicit and adequate
warnings could reduce ingestions and
allow adults to continue to enjoy the use
of the product.
The costs of such warnings would
most likely be small, and consumers
could make informed decisions about
the purchase and use of magnet sets.
However, although HF staff believes
warnings could be developed to
communicate the hazard, HF staff also
believes that injury reduction would be
limited. They point out that avoiding
the ingestion hazard requires consumers
to keep the product away from all
children in the incident age group, and
while caregivers who read and
understand the warnings may attempt to
keep this product out of the hands of
young children, HF staff doubts that
many caregivers are likely to be so
diligent about heeding the warning with
older children and adolescents (Sedney
& Smith, 2012). Also, HF staff doubts
that caregivers will think that constant
supervision is needed if they believe the
sets have been properly secured or that
their children are not aware of the sets
(Sedney & Smith, 2013). As noted in the
NPR (77 FR 53781), a corrective action
in 2010, which included stronger
warnings combined with provisions for
controlling distribution of magnet sets,
was found to be inadequate because of
a subsequent increase in ingestion
injuries involving the products.
Consequently, warnings (combined with
sales restrictions and other measures)
have not been judged to address the risk
posed by the subject magnet sets
adequately.
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iv. Restrictions on the Sale of Magnet
Sets
Another lower-cost option the
Commission could consider is to
prohibit sales of magnet sets in toy
stores, children’s sections of general
purpose stores, and near cash registers
of stores that sell any children’s
products. The costs of this option would
be lower than the rule because this
would allow the magnet sets to be
marketed to and used by consumers.
Sales limitations or requirements for
strong warnings might also be required
on Web sites advertising the sale of
magnets on the Internet.
The details of developing a set of sales
limitations and requirements would
need to be worked out, but the idea
would be to make sure that magnet sets,
to the extent possible, are not sold at
locations where children are likely to be
present. Sales requirements might also
be combined with strong and explicit
warnings that HF staff has suggested
could be developed.
However, the benefits of this option
are probably limited. Some parents
would still allow their children
(especially older children and
adolescents) to play with the magnet
sets, despite the warnings.23 In addition,
some children will get into the
packaging, even if parents try to restrict
the use of the desk toys.
v. Address Through Corrective Actions
Rather Than Regulatory Action
The Commission could continue to
address the hazard through corrective
action plans. However, this approach
may be inadequate because this
approach is reactive and would entail
waiting for new incidents to occur
rather than preventing them.
vi. Take No Action
The Commission could determine that
no rule is reasonably necessary to
reduce the risk of ingestion injuries
associated with small, powerful magnet
23 As noted in the NPR (77 FR 53781), one firm
agreed to a corrective action in 2010, which
included provisions for controlling distribution by
agreeing to ask retailers who market products
primarily to children to execute a Responsible
Sellers Agreement prohibiting marketing and sales
to children, as well as agreeing to stop the sale of
magnet sets to retailers who market products
exclusively to children. However, with a
subsequent increase in ingestion injuries involving
the products, Compliance began negotiation of
corrective action plans with 11 of 13 magnet set
importers that voluntarily agreed to cease the
importation, distribution, and continued sale of
their magnet sets, and administrative actions were
initiated by the Commission against two firms that
did not agree to cease sales voluntarily. By
implication, sales restrictions (combined with
warnings and other measures) have not been judged
to address the risk posed by the subject magnet sets
adequately.
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sets. Under this alternative, future
societal losses would be determined by
the numbers of products in use, and
other factors that affect the likelihood
that young children, adolescents, and
teens will ingest the magnets. Although
there would be no costs, such a
determination would not reduce
injuries.
4. Summary
Based on reports to the CPSC,
ingestions of small magnets contained
in certain magnet sets have caused
multiple, high-severity injuries that
require surgery to remove the magnets
and repair internal damage. Based on
the NEISS cases identified by the
Directorate for Epidemiology staff as
involving high-powered and/or ballshaped magnet ingestions, the estimated
benefits of the rule might amount to
about $28.6 million annually.
The costs of the rule consist of the
reduced producer surplus for firms and
lost utility by consumers, also are
uncertain. Based on annual sales
estimates available for 2009 through
mid-2012, these costs could amount to
as much as $6 million in lost producer
surplus and some unknown quantity of
lost utility.
There are alternative regulatory
actions that might allow the magnet sets
to continue to be marketed. For
example, the Commission, by
regulation, could issue alternative
requirements; issue requirements for the
packaging of the magnet sets (e.g.,
develop requirements for child-resistant
packaging); require warnings that
describe explicitly the hazard and how
to avoid it; and/or place limitations on
how and where the magnet sets can be
sold. These alternative actions—which
might be considered alone, or in
combination—would have varying
levels of effectiveness, but all of them
would be result in lower reductions in
injuries associated with magnet
ingestion.
I. Paperwork Reduction Act
The rule does not require
manufacturers (including importers) to
perform testing or require manufacturers
or retailers to keep records. For this
reason, the rule does not contain
‘‘collection of information
requirements,’’ as that term is used in
the Paperwork Reduction Act, 44 U.S.C.
3501–3520. Therefore, the rule need not
be submitted to the Office of
Management and Budget (OMB) in
accordance with 44 U.S.C. 3507(d) and
implementing regulations codified at 5
CFR 1320.11.
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J. Regulatory Flexibility Analysis
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1. Introduction
The Regulatory Flexibility Act (RFA)
requires that agencies review rules for
their potential economic impact on
small entities, including small
businesses. Section 604 of the RFA calls
for agencies to prepare a final regulatory
flexibility analysis, describing the
impact of the rule on small entities and
identifying impact-reducing
alternatives. The final regulatory
flexibility analysis is to contain:
(1) A statement of the need for, and
objectives of, the rule;
(2) a statement of the significant
issues raised by the public comments in
response to the initial regulatory
flexibility analysis, a statement of the
agency’s assessment of those issues, and
a statement of any changes made to the
proposed rule as a result of such
comments;
(3) the response of the agency to any
comments filed by the Chief Counsel for
Advocacy of the Small Business
Administration in response to the
proposed rule, and a statement of any
changes made in the final rule as a
result of the comments;
(4) a description of, and where
feasible, an estimate of the number of
small entities to which the proposed
rule will apply;
(5) a description of the projected
reporting, recordkeeping, and other
compliance requirements of the
proposed rule, including an estimate of
the classes of small entities that will be
subject to the requirement and the types
of professional skills necessary for the
preparation of the report or record; and
(6) a description of the steps the
agency has taken to minimize the
significant economic impact on small
entities consistent with the stated
objectives of applicable statutes,
including a statement of the factual,
policy, and legal reasons for selecting
the alternative adopted in the final rule
and why each one of the other
alternatives to the rule considered by
the agency which affect the impact on
small entities was rejected.
Accordingly, staff prepared a final
regulatory flexibility analysis, which is
summarized below.
2. Statement of the Need for, and
Objectives of, the Rule
The rule prohibits the sale or
distribution in commerce of magnet sets
and individual magnets intended to be
used with or as magnet sets that do not
meet the specific requirements
described in section F of this preamble.
The current designs of magnet sets of
the type that became popular in recent
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years would not meet the rule’s
requirements. The CPSC has received
information, described in section C of
this preamble, regarding incidents with,
and hazards posed by, sets of small,
powerful magnets. According to the
final regulatory analysis, there was an
annual average of about 929 medically
attended magnet ingestions that were
defined as at least ‘‘possibly of interest’’
during the period from 2009 through
June 2012. These ingestions resulted in
societal costs of about $28.6 million per
year.
The objective of the rule is to
eliminate or reduce the risk of injury to
consumers from the ingestion of one or
more small powerful magnets that
comprise the subject consumer
products. Because the magnet sets that
have been involved in incidents would
not meet the rule’s requirements, the
rule will substantially reduce the future
incidence and cost to society of
ingestions of magnet sets.
3. Comments on the Initial Regulatory
Flexibility Analysis
The Commission received comments
from more than 5,000 people in
response to the NPR. Many of the
comments related to issues that have a
bearing on the economic impacts of the
proposed rule on small businesses. The
Commission’s responses to comments
that address issues that were mentioned
in the initial regulatory flexibility
analysis (IRFA) are in included in
Section E of this notice.
4. Small Entities Subject to the Rule and
Possible Economic Impacts
The final rule would impact U.S.
importers and retailers of magnet sets
comprised of small, powerful magnets
of the size and magnetic force
proscribed by the rule. None of the
magnet sets within the scope of the rule
is produced domestically. All of the
U.S. firms that have marketed the
products are believed to have imported
them from manufacturers in China. The
one remaining firm that currently
imports magnet sets is a small business
under U.S. Small Business
Administration (SBA) size standards
(SBA, 2012).
Based on information reviewed on
product sales, including reports by firms
to the Office of Compliance and Field
Operations, the number of such magnet
sets that were sold to U.S. consumers
from 2009 through mid-2012 may have
totaled about 2.7 million sets, with a
value of roughly $50 million in 2012
dollars. This value reflects a
combination of retail sales directly to
consumers (through company Web sites
and other Internet retail sites) and sales
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59985
to retailers who market the products. A
review of retail prices reported by
importers and observed on Internet sites
suggests prices typically ranged from
about $20 to $45, with an average price
of about $25 for magnet sets that
commonly contain 216 to 224 magnets.
Larger sets of more than 1,000
individual magnets have reportedly
been sold at prices up to $300,
depending on the number of magnets
and the type of packaging.
We noted in the IRFA that the
economic impact of the rule would be
most severe for seven small importing
firms, which account for the great
majority (perhaps more than 98%) of
units sold according to sales
information provided to CPSC
Compliance staff; and five of these
importers reportedly derived most or all
of their revenues from the sale of the
magnet sets or related products. We
judged that these firms could go out of
business as a result of the rule. Two of
the other leading importers of magnet
sets apparently had fairly broad product
offerings, which could lessen the
severity of the economic impact of a
rule. Nevertheless, we noted that the
expected impacts of a final rule could
also be significant for these small
importers.
As discussed in section H.2.b. of this
preamble, due to CPSC’s enforcement
actions, current sales of magnet sets are
dramatically smaller than at the time of
the enforcement actions. We are aware
of only one major importer of magnet
sets that remains active in the market.
The rule will likely have an adverse
impact on this remaining firm. That firm
might go out of business, unless the firm
successfully markets other products,
including magnet sets that would
comply.
5. Projected Reporting, Recordkeeping,
and Other Compliance Requirements of
the Rule
The rule does not contain any
reporting or record keeping
requirements.
6. Alternatives to the Rule
The Commission could pursue other
options, including: Adopting an
alternative set of requirements for the
flux index or size of the magnets;
requiring safer packaging; requiring
warnings on the packaging and
promotional materials; imposing
restrictions on the locations where
magnet sets can be sold; addressing the
risk of injury presented by magnet sets
through corrective actions; and taking
no action at all. Each of these
alternatives is addressed in Section G of
this preamble and in the Final
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Regulatory Analysis at Section H of this
preamble. All of these alternatives
would reduce the expected impact of
the rule on small business. However, as
discussed in Sections G and H of this
preamble, these alternatives would not
be expected to achieve the same injury
reductions as the rule, and some of the
suggested alternatives would be beyond
the Commission’s authority.
K. Environmental Considerations
CPSC rules establishing performance
requirements are considered to ‘‘have
little or no potential for affecting the
human environment,’’ and
environmental assessments are not
usually prepared for these rules (16 CFR
1021.5 (c)(1)). This rule falls within the
categorical exemption.
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L. Executive Order 12988 (Preemption)
As required by Executive Order 12988
(February 5, 1996), the CPSC states the
preemptive effect of the rule as follows:
The rule is promulgated under
authority of the CPSA. 15 U.S.C. 2051–
2089. Section 26 of the CPSA provides
that ‘‘whenever a consumer product
safety standard under this Act is in
effect and applies to a risk of injury
associated with a consumer product, no
State or political subdivision of a State
shall have any authority either to
establish or to continue in effect any
provision of a safety standard or
regulation which prescribes any
requirements as the performance,
composition, contents, design, finish,
construction, packaging or labeling of
such product which are designed to deal
with the same risk of injury associated
with such consumer product, unless
such requirements are identical to the
requirements of the Federal Standard.’’
15 U.S.C. 2075(a). Upon application to
the Commission, a state or local
standard may be excepted from this
preemptive effect, if the state or local
standard: (1) Provides a higher degree of
protection from the risk of injury or
illness than the CPSA standard, and (2)
does not unduly burden interstate
commerce. In addition, the federal
government, or a state or local
government, may establish and continue
in effect a nonidentical requirement that
provides a higher degree of protection
than the CPSA requirement for the
hazardous substance for the federal,
state, or local government’s use. 15
U.S.C. 2075(b).
Thus, with the exceptions noted
above, the magnet set requirements
would preempt nonidentical state or
local requirements for magnet sets
designed to protect against the same risk
of injury.
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M. Effective Date
The Commission has determined that
the rule will become effective 180 days
from publication of the final rule in the
Federal Register and will apply to all
magnet sets imported into or otherwise
distributed in the United States that are
manufactured or imported on or after
that date. The CPSA requires that
consumer product safety rules take
effect not later than 180 days from their
promulgation, unless the Commission
finds there is good cause for a later date.
15 U.S.C. 2058(g)(1). In the NPR, the
Commission proposed that the rule
would take effect 180 days after
promulgation of a final rule. The
Commission received no comments on
the proposed effective date.
N. Findings
The CPSA requires the Commission to
make certain findings when issuing a
consumer product safety standard.
Specifically, the CPSA requires that the
Commission consider and make
findings about the degree and nature of
the risk of injury; the number of
consumer products subject to the rule;
the need of the public for the rule and
the probable effect on utility, cost, and
availability of the product; and other
means to achieve the objective of the
rule, while minimizing the impact on
competition, manufacturing, and
commercial practices. The CPSA also
requires the rule to be reasonably
necessary to eliminate or reduce an
unreasonable risk of injury associated
with the product; and issuing the rule
must be in the public interest. 15 U.S.C.
2058(f)(3).
In addition, the Commission must
find that: (1) If an applicable voluntary
standard has been adopted and
implemented, that compliance with the
voluntary standard is not likely to
adequately reduce the risk of injury, or
compliance with the voluntary standard
is not likely to be substantial; (2) that
benefits expected from the regulation
bear a reasonable relationship to the
regulation’s costs; and (3) that the
regulation imposes the least
burdensome requirement that would
prevent or adequately reduce the risk of
injury. Id. These findings are stated in
§ 1240.5 of the rule and are based on
information provided throughout this
preamble and the staff’s briefing
packages for the proposed and final
rules.
O. Conclusion
For the reasons stated in this
preamble, the Commission concludes
that magnet sets and individual magnets
that do not meet the requirements
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specified in this rule present an
unreasonable risk of injury.
List of Subjects in 16 CFR Part 1240
Consumer protection, Imports, Infants
and children, Labeling, Law
enforcement, Incorporation by
reference.
For the reasons stated in the
preamble, the Commission amends Title
16 of the Code of Federal Regulations by
adding part 1240 to read as follows:
PART 1240—SAFETY STANDARD FOR
MAGNET SETS
Sec.
1240.1 Scope, purpose, and effective date.
1240.2 Definitions.
1240.3 Requirements.
1240.4 Test procedure for determining flux
index.
1240.5 Findings.
Authority: 15 U.S.C. 2056 and 2058.
§ 1240.1
date.
Scope, purpose, and effective
This part 1240, a consumer product
safety standard, prescribes requirements
for magnet sets, as defined in § 1240.2,
and for individual magnets that are
marketed or intended for use with or as
magnet sets. These requirements are
intended to reduce or eliminate an
unreasonable risk of injury to
consumers who ingest magnets that are
part of magnet sets. This standard takes
effect on April 1, 2015 and applies to all
magnet sets and individual magnets, as
defined in § 1240.2, that are
manufactured or imported on or after
that date.
§ 1240.2
Definitions.
(a) The definitions in section 3 of the
Consumer Product Safety Act (15 U.S.C.
2052) apply to this part 1240.
(b) Magnet set means: Any aggregation
of separable magnetic objects that is a
consumer product intended, marketed
or commonly used as a manipulative or
construction item for entertainment,
such as puzzle working, sculpture
building, mental stimulation, or stress
relief. Relevant factors in determining
intended uses of a magnet set include,
but are not limited to: The
manufacturer’s stated intent (such as on
a label or Web site), if reasonable under
the circumstances; the content and
nature of advertising, promotion,
marketing, packaging, or display
relating to the product; and the uses for
which the product is commonly
recognized by consumers.
(c) Individual magnet means: An
individual magnetic object intended or
marketed for use with or as a magnet set
as defined in paragraph (b) of this
section.
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§ 1240.3
Requirements.
Each magnet in a magnet set, and any
individual magnet, that fits completely
within the cylinder described in 16 CFR
1501.4 must have a flux index of 50 kG2
mm2 or less when tested in accordance
with the method described in § 1240.4.
§ 1240.4 Test procedure for determining
flux index.
(a) Select at least one magnet of each
shape and size in the magnet set.
(b) Measure the flux index of each
selected magnet in accordance with the
procedure in sections 8.24.1 through
8.24.3 of ASTM F963–11, Standard
Consumer Safety Specification for Toy
Safety, approved on December 1, 2011.
The Director of the Federal Register
approves this incorporation by reference
in accordance with 5 U.S.C. 552(a) and
1 CFR part 51. You may obtain a copy
from ASTM International, 100 Barr
Harbor Drive, PO Box 0700, West
Conshohocken, PA 19428; telephone
610–832–9585; www.astm.org. You may
inspect a copy at the Office of the
Secretary, U.S. Consumer Product
Safety Commission, Room 820, 4330
East West Highway, Bethesda, MD
20814, telephone 301–504–7923, or at
the National Archives and Records
Administration (NARA). For
information on the availability of this
material at NARA, call 202–741–6030,
or go to: https://www.archives.gov/
federal_register/code_of_federal_
regulations/ibr_locations.html.
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§ 1240.5
Findings.
(a) Degree and nature of the risk of
injury. (1) Based on a review of National
Electronic Injury Surveillance System
(NEISS) data, we have determined that
an estimated 2,900 ingestions of
magnets from magnet sets were treated
in emergency departments during the
period from January 1, 2009 to
December 31, 2013, an average of about
580 ingestion incidents per year. From
review of databases other than NEISS,
we are aware of 109 reported incidents
occurring from January 1, 2009 through
June 24, 2014, involving the ingestion of
magnets by children between the ages of
1 and 15. Of those 109 incidents, 83
involved the ingestion of high-powered,
ball-shaped magnets that were
contained in products that meet the
above definition of ‘‘magnet set,’’ and 17
of those 109 incidents possibly involved
ingestion of this type of magnet. Thus,
100 reported incidents of ingestions
involved or possibly involved magnets
from magnet sets. Hospitalization was
required to treat 61 of the 100 incidents.
In 81 of the 100 incidents, the magnets
were ingested by children younger than
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four years old, or between the ages of
four and 12 years.
(2) Once ingested, these strong
magnets begin to interact in the
gastrointestinal tract, which can lead to
tissue death, perforations, and/or
fistulas, and possibly intestinal twisting
and obstruction. If left untreated, these
injuries can lead to infection of the
peritoneal cavity and other lifethreatening conditions. The number of
magnets swallowed increases the risk of
attraction and injury; but as few as two
magnets can cause serious internal
damage in a very short time. The fact
that many medical professionals do not
appreciate the health consequences of
magnet ingestion increases the severity
of the risk because a doctor who is
unfamiliar with these strong magnets
may send a child home and expect the
magnets to pass naturally. There are also
health consequences to the treatment
and surgery for removal of ingested
magnets. There may be a risk of
gastrointestinal bleeding; leakage of
holes that were repaired; rupturing of
resectioned bowels; temporary paralysis
of the bowels; use of a colostomy bag;
IV feeding initially, or for some longer
time period; and compromise of
nutrition and digestive function. Longterm health consequences can be severe,
as well: loss of intestinal tissue;
compromised nutrition absorption;
adhesions and scarring of intestines;
need for a bowel transplant; and
possible impediments to fertility for
girls. Even children who pass the
magnets naturally and do not require
surgery still need close observation by
doctors and may undergo sequential xrays, thus, exposing children to repeated
dosages of radiation.
(b) Number of consumer products
subject to this part. The market for
magnet sets increased substantially from
the time magnet sets were first
introduced, through mid-2012. We
estimate that the number of magnet sets
that have been sold to U.S. consumers
since 2009, the first year of significant
sales, may have totaled about 2.7
million sets, representing a value of
roughly $50 million. Because of CPSC
enforcement activity and actions taken
by firms since mid-2012, most firms
have ceased selling the magnet sets.
Actual sales since the end of 2012 by
the firms remaining in the market are
unknown but believed to be small. The
remaining major importing firm that
continues to sell the products is
estimated to hold a market share of less
than 2 percent of pre-enforcement
action sales. The approximate number
of products subject to this part (in terms
of unit sales) could be fewer 25,000 sets
per year.
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(c) The need of the public for magnet
sets and the effects of this part on their
utility, cost, and availability. (1) We
cannot estimate precisely the use value
that consumers receive from magnet
sets. In general, use value would be the
amount of money that consumers
expend on the product, plus the
consumer surplus (i.e., the difference
between the market price and the
maximum amount consumers would
have been willing to pay for the
product). Magnet sets of the type that
have been involved in incidents would
not comply with this part. Therefore,
consumers will no longer be able to
obtain utility from these magnet sets.
Although magnet sets clearly provide
utility to purchasers, magnet sets are not
necessities. Products that meet the
requirements of this part might be
developed that would serve some of the
purposes of magnet sets. This part
would continue to allow strong magnets
for other uses, such as commercial or
industrial uses.
(2) Individual magnets that are
intended or marketed for use with or as
magnet sets also must comply with the
requirements of this part. The
Commission is aware that firms selling
magnet sets have offered individual
magnets. To avoid firms circumventing
the rule by selling individual magnets
that are nevertheless intended or
marketed to be used as magnet sets, this
part covers such individual magnets.
Individual magnets sold for other uses
are not subject to this part. Thus, this
part does not affect the need for, utility,
or availability of individual magnets
that are sold for uses other than as
magnet sets.
(d) Other means to achieve the
objective of this part, while minimizing
the impact on competition and
manufacturing. (1) The Commission
considered various alternatives to the
requirements specified in this part. This
part requires that if a magnet set
contains a magnet that fits within the
small parts cylinder that CPSC uses for
testing toys, all magnets from that set
must have a flux index of 50 kG2 mm2
or less. In addition, individual magnets
intended or marketed for use with or as
magnet sets must meet these
requirements. We do not believe that
options other than a rule establishing
these requirements would sufficiently
reduce the number and severity of
injuries resulting from the ingestion of
magnets from these magnet sets. The
circumstances associated with this
product limit the likely effectiveness of
warning labels. Despite existing warning
labels and market restrictions, ingestion
incidents have continued to occur.
Parents and caregivers may not
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appreciate the hazard associated with
magnet sets. Accordingly, parents and
caregivers will continue to allow
children access to the product. Children
may not appreciate the hazard and will
continue to mouth the items, swallow
them, or in the case of young
adolescents and teens, use the magnets
to mimic body piercings. Once the
magnets are removed from their carrying
case, the magnets bear no warnings to
guard against ingestion or aspiration;
the small size of the individual magnets
precludes the addition of any warning.
Because individual magnets from
magnet sets are shared easily among
children, many end users of the product
are likely to have had no exposure to
any warning.
(2) The Commission has considered
other alternatives to reduce the risk
from magnet sets: alternative
performance requirements, such as
setting a different flux limit or requiring
bittering agents; safer packaging
requirements, such as requiring a
specific design for storage containers or
requiring child resistant packaging;
sales restrictions; continued corrective
actions; and taking no action. Some of
these alternatives may not be within the
Commission’s authority. Although each
of the alternative actions would have
lower costs and less impact on small
business, none is likely to significantly
reduce the injuries associated with
ingestion of magnets from magnet sets.
(e) Unreasonable risk. (1) As stated in
paragraph (a) of this section, according
to NEISS, an estimated 2,900 ingestions
of magnets from magnet sets were
treated in emergency departments
during the period from January 1, 2009
to December 31, 2013, an average of
about 580 ingestion incidents per year.
From sources other than NEISS, CPSC
has reports of 100 incidents of
ingestions that involved or possibly
involved magnets from magnet sets,
including one fatality.
(2) For the regulatory analysis, we
considered the period of time, 2009
through June 2012, before CPSC’s
compliance activities affected the
market. We identified 86 ingestions of
high-powered and/or ball-shaped
magnets, which occurred from 2009
through June 2012 reported through
NEISS. These incidents were
determined to involve, or possibly
involve, magnet sets. Based on these 86
incidents, we have determined that an
estimated 2,138 ingestions of magnets
from magnet sets were treated in
emergency departments from January 1,
2009 to June 2012. About 11 percent of
the victims of these ingestion incidents
required hospitalization, as opposed to
victims who were treated and released.
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The 2009 through June 2012 NEISS
estimates suggest an estimated annual
average of about 610 emergency
department-treated injuries, including
544 injuries that were treated and
released and 66 injuries that required
hospitalization. About 60 percent of
these emergency department-treated
ingestions involved children ages 4
through 12 years. Additionally, based
on estimates from the Commission’s
injury cost model (ICM), there were
another 319 injuries treated annually in
locations other than hospital emergency
departments (such as doctors’ offices,
clinics, ambulatory surgery centers, or
direct hospital admissions).
(3) After including the injuries treated
outside of hospital emergency
departments, there was an annual
average of about 929 medically attended
injuries involving ingestions of magnets
that were defined as at least ‘‘possibly
of interest’’ during the period from 2009
through June 2012. Injuries resulting
from such ingestions of magnets can be
severe and life threatening. The risk
posed by these magnets may not be
appreciated by children or caregivers,
who may assume, mistakenly, that the
consequences of ingesting magnets
would be similar to ingesting any other
small object. However, once ingested,
these strong magnets do not pass
naturally. Rather, these magnets are
mutually attracted to each other and
exert compression forces on the trapped
gastrointestinal tissue.
(4) We estimate that these injuries
resulted in annual societal costs of
about $28.6 million (in 2012 dollars)
during the 2009 through June 2012 time
period. The average estimated societal
costs per injury was about $27,000 for
injuries treated in locations other than
emergency departments (such as
physicians’ offices, clinics, ambulatory
surgery centers, or direct hospital
admissions); about $21,000 for injuries
that were treated and released from
emergency departments; and about
$130,000 for injuries that required
admission to the hospital for treatment.
Preventing these injuries would be the
expected benefit resulting from the rule.
(5) The costs of the rule would consist
of the lost producer surplus to firms that
produce and sell magnet sets, plus the
lost use value that consumers would
experience when magnet sets that do
not comply with the rule are no longer
available. Sales of magnet sets averaged
roughly 800,000 sets annually during
the 2009 through mid-2012 time period,
with an average retail price of about $25
per set in 2012. Thus, total industry
revenues averaged about $20 million
annually (i.e., 800,000 sets × $25 per set)
in 2012 dollars. The average import cost
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of the magnet sets to U.S. importers, a
major variable cost, may have amounted
to about $10 per set, or an average of
about $8 million annually (i.e., 800,000
sets × $10 import cost per set). We
estimate other variable costs associated
with the production, packaging,
marketing, and distribution of the
magnet sets would constitute a
significant proportion of the remaining
difference between revenues ($20
million) and import costs ($8 million).
If we assume that variable costs amount
to about half of the difference, lost
producer surplus would amount to
about $6 million.
(6) Thus, we estimate costs of the rule
to be about $6 million in lost producer
surplus and some unknown quantity of
lost utility. Considering the injuries
associated with magnet sets—and the
resulting societal costs, balanced against
the likely impact that the rule would
have on firms producing and selling the
product, and on consumers who would
lose the utility of the product—we
conclude that magnet sets pose an
unreasonable risk of injury and that the
rule is reasonably necessary to reduce
that risk.
(f) Public interest. The regulations in
this part are in the public interest
because they would reduce deaths and
injuries associated with magnet sets in
the future. A rule establishing
requirements that would eliminate
magnet sets of the type that have been
involved in incidents will mean that
children will have less access to this
product, thereby reducing the number of
incidents of children swallowing the
magnets and the resulting cost to society
of treating these injuries.
(g) Voluntary standards. Currently,
there is no voluntary standard for
magnet sets, nor any activity to develop
a voluntary standard for magnet sets.
(h) Relationship of benefits to costs.
(1) Based on reports to the CPSC,
ingestions of small magnets contained
in magnet sets have caused multiple,
high-severity injuries that require
surgery to remove the magnets and
repair internal damage. Based on the
information discussed in paragraph (e)
of this section, we estimate that the
benefits of this part might amount to
about $28.6 million annually.
(2) The costs of the rule, in terms of
reduced profits for firms and lost utility
by consumers, also are uncertain.
However, based on annual sales
estimates available for the 2009 through
June, 2012, study period, these costs
could amount to about $6 million in lost
producer surplus and some unknown
quantity of lost utility.
(i) Least burdensome requirement. We
have considered several alternatives to
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this part. We conclude that none of
these alternatives would adequately
reduce the risk of injury. Alternative
performance requirements might allow a
different flux index for magnets
contained in magnetic sets or require
the addition of an aversive (bittering)
agent to the magnets. Theoretically,
these alternatives might allow
continued production of some current
products. However, it is unclear
whether a different flux index would
succeed in making products that have
the desired physical qualities that make
them sufficiently enjoyable to adults,
and at the same time eliminate the
characteristics that make these strong
magnets hazardous to children.
Furthermore, the effectiveness of
aversive agents in reducing magnet
ingestions is questionable. We have
considered the possibility of requiring
rigorous warnings on the products or in
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the instructions for the products.
However, magnet sets currently and
formerly on the market provide
warnings concerning the potential
hazard to children. Accordingly, it is
unlikely that even strengthened
warnings would substantially reduce
the incidence of magnet ingestions. This
is particularly true for incidents
involving older children and
adolescents. Moreover, children who are
old enough to understand the warnings
may still not abide by them. Some type
of sales restriction, limiting the location
where magnet sets could be sold, might
be possible. However, even with
restrictions on sales, ingestions are still
likely to occur as children encounter
these magnets in the home, at school, or
other locations where adults have
brought them and made them available
to children. The Commission could
continue to address the hazard from
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magnet sets through corrective actions,
i.e., recalls of the product. However,
these actions would not prevent
additional companies from entering the
market and importing magnet sets into
the country in the future. The
Commission also has the option of
taking no regulatory action. Although it
is possible that, with increased
awareness of the hazard over time, some
reduction in ingestions could occur, the
magnitude of any such reduction in
incidents is uncertain and would likely
be smaller than those resulting from the
requirements of this part.
Dated: September 26, 2014.
Todd A. Stevenson,
Secretary, U.S. Consumer Product Safety
Commission.
[FR Doc. 2014–23341 Filed 10–2–14; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 6355–01–P
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Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 79, Number 192 (Friday, October 3, 2014)]
[Rules and Regulations]
[Pages 59961-59989]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Printing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2014-23341]
[[Page 59961]]
Vol. 79
Friday,
No. 192
October 3, 2014
Part IV
Consumer Product Safety Commission
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16 CFR Part 1240
Final Rule: Safety Standard for Magnet Sets; Final Rule
Federal Register / Vol. 79 , No. 192 / Friday, October 3, 2014 /
Rules and Regulations
[[Page 59962]]
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CONSUMER PRODUCT SAFETY COMMISSION
16 CFR Part 1240
[CPSC Docket No. CPSC-2012-0050]
Final Rule: Safety Standard for Magnet Sets
AGENCY: Consumer Product Safety Commission.
ACTION: Final rule.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: The Consumer Product Safety Commission (CPSC, Commission, or
we) is issuing a rule establishing requirements for magnet sets and
individual magnets that are intended or marketed to be used with or as
magnet sets. As defined in the rule, magnet sets are aggregations of
separable magnetic objects that are marketed or commonly used as a
manipulative or construction item for entertainment, such as puzzle
working, sculpture building, mental stimulation, or stress relief.
Under the rule, if a magnet set contains a magnet that fits within the
CPSC's small parts cylinder, each magnet in the magnet set must have a
flux index of 50 kG\2\ mm\2\ or less. An individual magnet that is
marketed or intended for use as part of a magnet set also must meet
these requirements. The flux index is determined by the method
described in ASTM F963-11, Standard Consumer Safety Specification for
Toy Safety.
DATES: This rule will become effective on April 1, 2015. The
incorporation by reference of the publication listed in this rule is
approved by the Director of the Federal Register as of April 1, 2015.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Thomas Lee, Compliance Officer, Office
of Compliance and Field Operations, Consumer Product Safety Commission,
4330 East West Highway, Bethesda, MD 20814; telephone: (301) 504-7737,
or email: tlee@cpsc.gov.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
A. Background
The Commission is issuing a safety standard under the Consumer
Product Safety Act (CPSA) establishing requirements for magnet sets
that have been associated with serious injuries and one reported
death.\1\ As discussed in greater detail in section B of this preamble,
magnet sets are sets of small, powerful magnets marketed for general
entertainment as construction toys, desk toys, sculpture sets, or
stress relievers. The rule also covers individual magnets that are
marketed or intended for use with or as magnet sets. The Commission
concludes that this rule is necessary to address an unreasonable risk
of injury and death associated with these magnet sets.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\1\ The Commission voted 4-0-1 to publish this notice in the
Federal Register. Chairman Elliot F. Kaye, Commissioner Robert S.
Adler, Commissioner Marietta S. Robinson and Commissioner Joseph P.
Mohorovic voted to approve publication of the final rule.
Commissioner Ann Marie Buerkle abstained from the matter.
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1. Initial Incident Reports to CPSC and CPSC's Response
Significant U.S. sales of magnet sets marketed for general
entertainment began in 2009. CPSC staff received the first consumer
incident report involving magnet sets in February 2010. No injury
resulted from this incident. Shortly after receiving this report, CPSC
staff collected and evaluated samples of the magnet sets.
In December 2010, we received our first consumer incident report
involving the surgical removal of magnets that had been part of a
magnet set. During 2011, CPSC staff collected magnet sets marketed to
children under 13 years old, and staff evaluated the compliance of
these products with ASTM F963-11, Standard Consumer Safety
Specification for Toy Safety. Staff evaluated these products under ASTM
F-963 because some of the products were labeled and marketed in a
manner that appeared to promote use by children and this standard
includes requirements for the strength and size of magnets that are
part of a toy intended for children. For firms whose products did not
have labeling or marketing information, CPSC staff encouraged those
firms to develop marketing programs and labeling content to help ensure
that these magnet sets were not marketed to children. In addition, CPSC
staff issued Notices of Noncompliance to firms that marketed magnet
sets to children younger than 14 years of age.
In November 2011, in response to continuing reports of injuries
associated with the products, the CPSC, in cooperation with two
manufacturers, launched a public awareness campaign, which included a
video public service announcement (PSA). The PSA advised children: Not
to put magnets from magnet sets into their mouth; described the risk of
injury presented by the ingestion of high-powered magnets; and provided
tips to avoid magnet ingestion injuries, along with guidance for
children who had swallowed magnets and parents who suspect that their
child has swallowed magnets. Despite the CPSC's compliance and public
awareness activities, reported incidents of magnet ingestion by
children increased from 13 in 2010, to 19 in 2011, and 52 in 2012.
Likely due to CPSC enforcement and regulatory activity beginning in
mid-2012, and because the largest distributor ceased operations at the
end of 2012, reported incidents declined to 13 incidents in 2013,
including one fatality, and two incidents in 2014. We received an
additional magnet ingestion incident report for which there was
insufficient information to determine the date of the incident. As of
June 24, 2014, 100 ingestion incidents involving, or possibly
involving, ingestion of magnets from magnet sets have been reported to
CPSC. (As discussed in section C of this preamble, staff's analysis of
incidents reported through the National Electronic Injury Surveillance
System (NEISS) estimates that 2,900 possible magnet set, emergency
department-treated ingestions occurred in the United States from
January 1, 2009 through December 31, 2013).
2. Corrective Actions
In May 2012, Compliance staff contacted a total of 13 independent
importers of magnet sets and asked these importers to provide reports
required under Section 15 of the CPSA. Most of the firms agreed to stop
selling the products pending the results of staff's evaluation of the
products. Given the continued injuries to children, staff negotiated
voluntary corrective action plans with 11 of the 13 magnet set
importers. These firms agreed to cease importation, distribution, and
sales of magnet sets. Two importers did not agree to stop selling the
magnets and the Commission initiated an administrative action in July
and August 2012 seeking a determination that the magnet sets present a
substantial product hazard and an order that the firm cease importation
and distribution of the products. The Commission initiated a third
administrative action in December 2012 after one of the firms that had
agreed to stop sale subsequently resumed selling magnet sets. Two of
the three administrative actions have been resolved. In May 2014, the
Commission settled the administrative action against Maxfield & Oberton
Holdings, LLC, and Craig Zucker, individually, and as an officer of
Maxfield & Oberton Holdings, LLC. The settlement established and funded
a Recall Trust, which, in accordance with a corrective action plan
(CAP), is recalling the firm's magnet sets. In July 2014, the
Commission settled the administrative complaint against Star Networks
USA, LLC (Star). Under that settlement, Star has agreed to implement a
CAP providing for the recall of the firm's magnet sets. The third firm,
Zen Magnets, LLC, remains the subject of a CPSC administrative
[[Page 59963]]
action and continues to market and sell magnet sets.
3. Notice of Proposed Rulemaking
In the Federal Register of September 4, 2012 (77 FR 53781), the
Commission published a notice of proposed rulemaking (NPR) to address
the unreasonable risk of injury associated with magnet sets. The NPR
proposed a standard that would require magnets from magnet sets
containing at least one magnet that fits within the CPSC's small parts
cylinder to have a flux index of 50 kG\2\ mm\2\ or less. The proposed
rule sought comment on whether the rule should include magnets sold
individually that could be aggregated into a magnet set. The final rule
modifies the proposal to include individual magnets marketed or
intended for the same uses as a magnet set, i.e., as a manipulative or
construction item for entertainment, such as puzzle working, sculpture
building, mental stimulation, or stress relief. We discuss this
modification and other differences between the proposed and final rule
in Section F of this preamble. The information discussed in this
preamble comes from CPSC staff's briefing packages for the proposed and
final magnet set rule, which are available on the CPSC's Web site at:
https://www.cpsc.gov/PageFiles/128934/magnetstd.pdf (NPR briefing
package) and https://www.cpsc.gov/Global/Newsroom/FOIA/CommissionBriefingPackages/2014/SafetyStandardforMagnetSets-FinalRule.pdf (final rule briefing package).
B. The Product
1. Description of the Product
The magnet sets covered by this rule typically are comprised of
numerous identical, spherical, or cube-shaped magnets, approximately 3
millimeters to 6 millimeters in size, with the majority made from NdFeB
(Neodymium-Iron-Boron or NIB). As discussed in section F of this
preamble, the rule also covers individual magnets that are marketed or
intended for use with or as magnet sets. These magnets exhibit strong
magnetic properties. The magnetized neodymium-iron-boron cores are
coated with a variety of metals and other materials to make them more
attractive to consumers and to protect the brittle magnetic alloy
materials from breaking, chipping, and corroding.
The magnets that are part of magnet sets are often referred to as
``magnet balls'' or ``rare earth magnets.'' Magnet sets are and have
been marketed as: adult desk toys, the ``puzzles of the future,''
stress relievers, science kits, and educational tools for ``brain
development.'' As shown in product instructions and in videos on
related Web sites, magnet sets can be used and reused to make various
two- and three-dimensional sculptures and figures, jewelry, and toys,
such as spinning tops. Videos also show how these magnets can be used
to mimic mouth and tongue piercings.
Magnet sets come with varying numbers of magnets, from as few as 27
magnets, to more than 1,000. Most of the magnets have been sold in sets
of 125 balls or sets of 216 to 224 balls. The one firm that is
currently marketing magnet sets that would not meet this rule sells one
or more balls individually. Based on product information provided by
marketers, the most common magnet size is approximately 5 millimeters
in diameter, although balls as small as about 3 millimeters have been
sold, as have sets of larger magnet balls (perhaps 15 millimeters to 25
millimeters in diameter). In addition to magnetic ball sets, magnet
sets comprised of small magnetic cubes have also been sold, as have
small magnetic rods. Sets made up of rods, however, have comprised a
relatively small share of the market.
Most magnet sets contain magnets that are glossy and highly
reflective with the spheres often described as similar in appearance to
BBs or ball bearings. Magnet set magnets come in a variety of colors,
including silver, blue, yellow, green and orange. The products are
packaged in a variety of ways, including fabric pouches, wooden boxes,
and metal tins.
The rule defines ``magnet set'' as: ``any aggregation of separable
magnetic objects that is a consumer product intended, marketed or
commonly used as a manipulative or construction item for general
entertainment, such as puzzle working, sculpture, mental stimulation,
or stress relief.'' As discussed in section F of this preamble, the
rule also covers individual magnets marketed or intended for use with
magnet sets.
2. Use of the Product
For the NPR, CPSC's Human Factors staff provided an assessment that
discusses the appeal and use of magnet sets. Magnet sets have some
appeal for virtually all age groups. These types of magnets tend to
capture attention because they are shiny and reflect light. They are
smooth, which gives the magnets tactile appeal, and these magnets make
soft snapping sounds as they are manipulated. These properties or
characteristics of magnets are likely to seem magical to younger
children and may evoke a degree of awe and amusement among older
children and teens. These features are the foundation of the magnet
sets' appeal as a challenging puzzle, or as a manipulative, or as
jewelry. These magnets may also be used like a stress ball and as a way
to hold things in place.
Children, from toddlers through teens, have been exposed to magnet
sets in the home setting and elsewhere. As the NPR preamble notes, we
have reports of ingestion incidents that involve children 5 years of
age and younger. The reports reflect similar scenarios to other
ingestion incidents among this age group because mouthing and ingesting
non-food items is a normal part of preschool children's exploratory
behavior. In a number of reported incidents, the magnets were not in
their original containers, and caregivers were unaware that some of the
magnets from the set were missing and in the child's possession.
As noted in the NPR preamble, magnet sets also appeal to children
of early-to-middle elementary school age. Younger children in this age
group are interested in simple three-dimensional puzzles, and older
elementary school children are interested in highly complex puzzles.
Children in the latter age group also can engage in activities that
require the type of meticulous work and attention that would be needed
to create the complex patterns and structures found on paper and in
video instructions for magnet sets. Additionally, magnets typically are
included in science curricula for elementary school children to
demonstrate the basic concepts of magnetism.
For all of these reasons, and consistent with reviews on retail Web
sites, magnet sets are sometimes purchased for children under the age
of 14, despite warnings or labeling to the contrary. For example,
approximately one-third of 53 adults reviewing one manufacturer's
product on Amazon.com reported purchasing the magnets for children 8
through 11 years of age.
Thus, it is foreseeable that some portion of these products will be
purchased for elementary school children and teens. Moreover, given the
relatively low cost for some magnet sets, elementary school children
and teens may purchase the magnet sets themselves. The incident reports
reflect behaviors that are beyond the intended use of the product but
that are foreseeable for the groups using them. For example, it is
foreseeable that some children will place these magnets in their mouth,
even if the manufacturer
[[Page 59964]]
warns against this behavior. The mouthing of objects, common among
younger children, develops into less obvious and more socially
acceptable oral habits, which may continue through childhood and
adolescence and into adulthood (e.g., mouthing or chewing a fingertip,
fingernail, knuckle, pen, pencil, or other object, especially while
concentrating or worrying). Where details are provided, the incident
reports describe scenarios that are consistent with the behaviors of
young children and teens. Although exploratory play is generally
associated with very young children, people of all ages use their
senses to explore unfamiliar phenomena. 77 FR 53781, 53783 (Sep. 4,
2012).
3. The Market
Based on information reviewed by staff on product sales, including
reports by firms provided to the Office of Compliance and Field
Operations, the number of magnet sets that were sold to U.S. consumers
from 2009 through mid-2012, may have totaled about 2.7 million sets,
with a value of roughly $50 million. This estimate reflects retail
sales directly to consumers (through company Web sites and other
Internet retail sites) and sales to retailers who market the products.
Staff's review of retail prices reported by importers, and observed on
Internet sites in 2012, suggested prices of magnets sets typically
ranging from about $20 to $45 per set, with an average price of about
$25.
To our knowledge, all of the firms that have marketed the products,
including the firm that continues to sell individual magnets and magnet
sets, import the products packaged and labeled for sale to U.S.
consumers. Several Chinese manufacturers have the facilities and
production capacity to meet the orders of U.S. importers. Additionally,
there are no major barriers to market entry for firms wishing to source
products from China for sale in the United States. Firms may have sales
arrangements with Internet retailers who hold stock for them and
process orders.
We have identified about 25 U.S. firms and individuals who imported
magnet sets for sale in the United States in 2012. The combined sales
of the top seven firms probably have accounted for the great majority
(perhaps more than 90%) of units sold. One firm, Maxfield & Oberton
Holdings, LLC, believed to have held a dominant position in the market
for magnetic desk sets since the firm entered the market in 2009,
ceased operating in December 2012, and is no longer an importer of
magnet sets. That now-defunct firm, along with a few larger firms
(including a firm based in Canada with a branch office in the United
States), marketed their products through accounts with retailers. They
have also sold their products directly to consumers via the Internet,
using their own Web sites, or other Internet shopping sites. In
addition to products offered for sale by U.S. importers, consumers also
have the ability to purchase magnetic sets directly from sources in
Hong Kong or China that market products through a leading Internet
shopping site.
C. Risk of Injury
The risk of injury addressed by this rule is damage to intestinal
tissue caused when a person ingests more than one magnet from a magnet
set (or one magnet and a ferromagnetic object). The magnets are
attracted to each other in the digestive system, damaging the
intestinal tissue that becomes trapped between the magnets. In rare
cases, there can be interaction between magnets in the airways and
digestive tract (esophagus). These injuries can be difficult to
diagnose and treat because the symptoms of magnet ingestion often
appear similar to those of less serious conditions, such as the flu,
and because many doctors are unfamiliar with the risks of magnet
ingestion. In addition, the limitations of standard diagnostic tools to
identify and evaluate the presence of magnets in the body may make
magnet ingestion difficult to identify. Serious injury and even death
are consequences of ingestion of strong magnets by children.
1. Incident Data
NEISS data. CPSC staff reviewed data from the NEISS database of
magnet-related ingestion cases treated in emergency departments from
January 1, 2009 to December 31, 2013.\2\ CPSC staff analyzed 456
magnet-related ingestion cases and determined that 121 of the cases
involved or possibly involved ingestion of magnets from magnet sets.
Staff further determined that an estimated 2,900 ingestions of magnets
from magnet sets were treated in U.S. emergency departments during this
5-year period--an estimated average of 580 emergency department-treated
magnet ingestions per year. The largest portion of these incidents
involved children 4 through 12 years of age. An estimated 1,900 of the
2,900 victims are in the 4- through 12-year-old age group (65.3
percent). For more information about the process of developing the
estimates of incidents, see the memorandum from the Directorate for
Epidemiology, located at Tab B of staff's briefing package: https://www.cpsc.gov/Global/Newsroom/FOIA/CommissionBriefingPackages/2014/SafetyStandardforMagnetSets-FinalRule.pdf.
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\2\ The Commission collects information on hospital emergency
room-treated injuries through the NEISS database. This data can be
used to provide national estimates of product-related injuries
treated in U.S. hospital emergency departments. Incidents reported
to the Commission represent a minimum count of injuries. To account
for incidents that are not reported to the Commission, the staff
calculates an estimated number of such injuries.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Databases other than NEISS. The preamble to the proposed rule (77
FR at 53784 through 53785) summarized the data for incidents reported
through databases other than NEISS from January 1, 2009 through June
30, 2012. These incidents involved the ingestion of magnets by children
between the ages of 1 and 15. For that period, we received reports of
50 incidents involving the ingestion of magnets by children in this age
range. Of those 50 incidents, 38 involved the ingestion of high-
powered, ball-shaped magnets contained in products that meet the
definition above of ``magnet set''; five of the 50 incidents possibly
involved ingestion of this type of magnet. In 35 of the 43 incidents
involving or possibly involving magnets from a magnet set, two or more
magnets were ingested. Hospitalization was required in 29 of the 43
incidents, with surgery necessary to remove the magnets in 20 of the 29
hospitalizations. In the other nine hospitalizations, the victim
underwent colonoscopic or endoscopic procedures to remove the magnets.
In 37 of the 43 incidents, the magnets were ingested by children
younger than 4 years old or between the ages of 4 and 12 years.
Since publication of the NPR, the Commission has received reports
of additional incidents involving the ingestion of magnets by children
between the ages of 1 year and 15 years old, including one report of a
fatality associated with the ingestion of small spherical magnets. We
have now received reports of a total of 100 incidents involving or
possibly involving the ingestion of high-powered, ball-shaped magnets
contained in products that meet the definition of ``magnet set.'' The
reports indicate that the incidents occurred between January 1, 2009
and June 24, 2014. Sixty-one of the 100 reported incidents required
hospitalization. In 87 of the 100 reported incidents, the magnets were
ingested by children younger than 4 years old or between the ages of 4
and 12 years.
Among the 100 reported incidents is one fatality that involved
magnets from a magnet set. In August 2013, a 19-
[[Page 59965]]
month-old female died from ischemic bowel caused by magnets from magnet
sets in her small intestine.
2. Hazard Scenarios
As discussed in the preamble to the proposed rule, the incident
reports describe scenarios that are consistent with behaviors of
children in the identified age ranges. As noted in the NPR, mouthing of
objects, which is common among younger children, develops into less
obvious and more socially acceptable oral habits, which may continue
through childhood and adolescence and into adulthood (e.g., mouthing or
chewing a fingertip, fingernail, knuckle, pen, pencil, or other object,
especially while concentrating or worrying). 77 FR 53781, 53783 (Sep.
4, 2012). For example, in the incidents reported in the 8 through 12-
year-old age group, one child described wanting to feel the force of
the magnets through his tongue; one was trying to see if the magnets
would stick to her braces; and another wanted to see if the magnets
would stick together through her teeth. In another common scenario that
accounted for half of the reported ingestion incidents among 8 to 15
year olds, children used multiple magnets to simulate piercings of
their tongue, lips, or cheeks. In incidents reported among children
under the age of 4 years, children put the magnets in their mouths and
either intentionally or accidentally swallowed them.
The preamble to the proposed rule provides summaries of several
incident reports that demonstrate a few of the reported hazard
scenarios (77 FR at 53785 to 53786). These scenarios include two
incidents in which young girls (10 and 13 years of age) swallowed
multiple magnet balls while using the magnets to simulate tongue and
lip piercings. The girls underwent surgical procedures to remove magnet
balls from their intestines. In three other scenarios, magnet balls
ingested by children under the age of 3 years had to be removed
surgically from the children's stomach and intestines. In three of the
five incidents described in the preamble to the proposed rule, the
child's parent or caregiver did not realize the child had ingested
magnets, which resulted in a delay in treatment and an increase in the
severity of the injuries from the magnets, which attached to each other
across intestinal tissue.
3. Details Concerning Injuries
Multiple factors complicate the diagnosis of injury from magnet
ingestion (77 FR 53786). These factors include a lack of awareness by
medical professionals of the dangers posed by the ingestion of high-
powered magnets; the inability of standard diagnostic tools to
demonstrate that the ingested item is a magnet; the similarities
between symptoms resulting from magnet ingestion injuries and less
serious conditions like the flu; and victims' inability or
unwillingness to communicate to their caregivers or medical personnel
that they have ingested magnets.
The preamble to the proposed rule discussed the manner in which
ingested high-powered magnets can cause harm by compressing intestinal
tissue, the specific types of injuries that can result when tissue is
trapped between two magnets, and the risks associated with those
injuries (77 FR 53786). These injuries include perforations that can
result in infection due to leakage of gut contents into the abdominal
cavity and obstructions that can lead to intestinal tissue becoming
necrotic or rupturing and causing contamination of the abdominal
cavity. Surgical procedures often are required to remove magnets from
the digestive system. Complications can arise after these procedures,
including bleeding, infection, and ileus (temporary paralysis of gut
motility). Long-term complications resulting from this type of surgical
procedure can include: (1) Adhesions (where bands of intra-abdominal
scar tissue form that can interfere with gut movement and can cause
obstruction); (2) removal of long sections of injured bowel; and (3)
impaired digestive function.
D. Statutory Authority
This rulemaking is conducted pursuant to the Consumer Product
Safety Act (CPSA). Magnet sets are ``consumer products'' that can be
regulated by the Commission under the authority of the CPSA. 15 U.S.C.
2052(a).
Under section 7 of the CPSA, the Commission is authorized to
promulgate a mandatory consumer product safety standard that sets forth
performance requirements for a consumer product or that sets forth
requirements that a product be marked or accompanied by clear and
adequate warnings or instructions. 15 U.S.C. 2056. A performance,
warning, or instruction standard must be reasonably necessary to
prevent or reduce an unreasonable risk or injury associated with a
consumer product.
Section 9 of the CPSA specifies the procedure that the Commission
must follow to issue a consumer product safety standard under section
7. In accordance with section 9, the Commission commenced this
rulemaking by issuing an NPR on September 4, 2012 (77 FR 53781),
including the proposed rule and a preliminary regulatory analysis under
section 9(c) of the CPSA. In addition, the Commission requested
comments on the risk of injury identified, the regulatory alternatives
under consideration, and other possible alternatives for addressing the
risk. Id. 2058(c). As discussed in section E of this preamble, the
Commission considered the comments received in response to the proposed
rule.
Section 9 also requires the Commission to provide interested
persons ``an opportunity for the oral presentation of data, views, or
arguments,'' in addition to an opportunity to provide written comments.
Id. 2058(d)(2). Accordingly, the Commission held a public hearing on
the proposed rule on October 22, 2013, at agency headquarters in
Bethesda, MD. The hearing notice was published in the Federal Register
(78 FR 58491). The submissions forwarded to the agency by presenters
before the hearing, can be read online at: https://www.cpsc.gov/en/Newsroom/Public-Calendar/2014/Public-Hearing/Agenda/Magnet-/. Videos of
the presentations can be viewed at: https://www.cpsc.gov/Newsroom/Multimedia/?vid=66455. The Commission also allowed submitters to
forward additional written comments for 1 week after the hearing. We
considered all of the written and oral comments received.
With this notice, the Commission issues a final rule, along with a
final regulatory analysis. See id. 2058(f)(1). According to section
9(f)(1) of the CPSA, before promulgating a consumer product safety
rule, the Commission must consider and make appropriate findings to be
included in the rule on the following issues: (1) The degree and nature
of the risk of injury that the rule is designed to eliminate or reduce;
(2) the approximate number of consumer products subject to the rule;
(3) the public's need for the products subject to the rule, and the
probable effect the rule will have on utility, cost, or availability of
such products; and (4) the means to achieve the objective of the rule
while minimizing adverse effects on competition, manufacturing, and
commercial practices. Id. 2058(f)(1).
Pursuant to section 9(f)(3) of the CPSA, to issue a final rule, the
Commission must find that the rule is ``reasonably necessary to
eliminate or reduce an unreasonable risk of injury associated with such
product'' and find that issuing the rule is in the public interest. Id.
2058(f)(3)(A)&(B). In addition, if a voluntary standard
[[Page 59966]]
addressing the risk of injury has been adopted and implemented, the
Commission must find that: (1) The voluntary standard is not likely to
eliminate or adequately reduce the risk of injury, or that (2)
substantial compliance with the voluntary standard is unlikely. Id.
2058(f)(3(D). The Commission also must find that the expected benefits
of the rule bear a reasonable relationship to the cost of the rule and
that the rule imposes the least burdensome requirements that would
adequately reduce the risk of injury. Id. 2058(f)(3)(E)&(F).
E. Response to Comments on the Proposed Rule
This section summarizes the issues raised by comments on the
proposed rule and provides that Commission's responses to those
comments.
1. Oral Presentations
On October 22, 2013, the Commission provided the public an
opportunity to present views on the proposed rule in person before the
Commission Presenters at the hearing included representatives from the
Consumer Federation of American, Consumers Union, the American Academy
of Pediatrics, and the National Association of Pediatric
Gastroenterology, Hepatology, and Nutrition. The medical experts
reported that the available research most likely reflects an undercount
of the true incidence of injuries associated with magnet sets. The
doctors also stated there was no evidence suggesting that the victims'
caregivers were negligent or otherwise impaired at the time of the
ingestion incidents. Rather, the doctors noted that ingestion-related
injuries, such as those associated with magnet sets, can be experienced
in households with the most caring and well-educated caregivers. The
doctors also testified that public education campaigns take a long time
to show effects and that those campaigns would not be as effective in
reducing magnet ingestion injuries as the proposed rule, which they
strongly urged the Commission to finalize.
2. Written Comments
The preamble to the NPR invited comments concerning all aspects of
the proposed rule. We received written comments from more than 5,000
commenters in response to the NPR. Many of the comments contained more
than one issue, and many of the comments addressed the same or similar
issues. Thus, we organized our responses by issue. All of the comments
can be viewed at: www.regulations.gov, by searching under the docket
number for this rulemaking, CPSC-2012-0050.
Commission's Authority To Promulgate the Rule
(Comment 1)--Many commenters opine that promulgating the rule
exceeds the Commission's authority. More specifically, several
commenters state that the Commission has no authority to issue a rule
that would result in a prohibition of all magnet sets currently on the
market simply because certain consumers use magnets in a manner that is
inconsistent with the purpose intended for the product. Other
commenters opine that the rule violates consumers' constitutional
rights, including the right to freedom of expression through purchasing
products they desire, and that a rule that prohibits the sale of
covered magnet sets is drastically out of proportion to the risks
presented by the product. Other commenters characterize the safety
standard as the government usurping responsibility for the safety of
children, which they say should properly reside with children's parents
or caregivers.
(Response 1)--The Commission has the authority to issue a rule
establishing performance requirements that a product must meet so that
the product does not present an unreasonable risk of injury to
consumers. Section 7 of the CPSA authorizes the Commission to
promulgate consumer product safety standards as performance
requirements or that require products to be marked or accompanied by
clear and adequate warnings and instructions. The requirements of a
standard issued under this provision must be reasonably necessary to
prevent or reduce an unreasonable risk of injury associated with the
product. Determining whether a product presents an unreasonable risk of
injury requires the Commission to consider the costs and benefits of
regulatory action. The regulatory analysis discusses that assessment
(see Section H of this preamble). The Commission must balance such
factors as the severity of injury, the likelihood of injury, and the
possible harm the regulation could impose on manufacturers and
consumers. If evidence demonstrates that misuse of a product results in
an unreasonable risk of injury, the Commission has the authority to
promulgate a rule reasonably necessary to reduce or eliminate that
risk. Certainly parents and caregivers must be responsible for their
children's safety. However, as discussed elsewhere, parents and
caregivers may not be aware of the hazards that magnets present.
Finally, there is no constitutional right to purchase a product.
(Comment 2)--Several commenters characterize the Commission's
enforcement activities (filing administrative complaints, requesting
certain retailers and importers to stop sales of magnet sets, and
requesting recalls of magnet sets) as improper means to prohibit
certain magnet sets. The commenters suggest that rulemaking, rather
than these enforcement actions, is the appropriate approach.
(Response 2)--Enforcement activities are intended to remove
products from the market that present a substantial product hazard.
This rulemaking proceeding is intended to establish requirements that
magnet sets must meet from the effective date of the rule going
forward. As such, this rulemaking proceeding seeks to impose
requirements on all magnet sets subject to the rule that are sold after
the rule becomes effective. The administrative proceeding and
enforcement activities address only the products currently or
previously distributed by specific importers and retailers.
(Comment 3)--Several commenters opine that the Commission would be
acting arbitrarily or capriciously in violation of section 706(2) of
the Administrative Procedures Act (APA) by promulgating the rule; that
the rule violates due process requirements; and that the Commission
should hold a formal hearing under Sections 556 and 557 of the APA,
even if such a hearing is not required statutorily.
(Response 3)--The Commission is following the rulemaking procedures
set forth in sections 7 and 9 of the CPSA and in section 553 of the
APA. The commenters refer to section 556 and 557 of the APA. These
provisions apply to formal rulemaking. However, the magnet proceeding
is governed by section 553 of the APA, which codifies the procedure for
informal rulemaking. By following the appropriate procedures under the
CPSA and the APA, the Commission is providing the process that is due.
Lack of Product Defect
(Comment 4)--Commenters point out that magnet sets pose no risk of
injury when used properly, that they function as intended, and
therefore, they are not defective. The commenters contend that the
improper use of a safe product by a minority of consumers does not
render the product defective and does not warrant promulgating a rule
that would remove the product from the market.
(Response 4)--To promulgate a consumer product safety standard, the
[[Page 59967]]
Commission must find that the rule is reasonably necessary to reduce an
unreasonable risk of injury associated with the product. A product may
present an unreasonable risk of injury, even if the product does not
contain a fault, flaw, or irregularity that impacts the manner in which
the product functions. When assessing risk, CPSC considers how
consumers may actually use a product, not just the manner of use
intended by the manufacturer. For example, the Commission's cigarette
lighter standard requires disposable and novelty lighters to meet
child-resistance requirements to protect against the misuse of lighters
by children. 16 CFR part 1210. Similarly, the Commission's lawn mower
standard includes requirements to guard against consumers intentionally
removing a shielding safety device from the mower. 16 CFR part 1205.
See Southland Mower v. Consumer Product Safety Commission, 619 F.2d
499, 513 (5th Cir. 1980) (reviewing the Commission's lawn mower
standard, the court stated: ``Congress intended for injuries resulting
from foreseeable misuse of a product to be counted in assessing
risk'').
Impact of the Rule on the Availability of Magnet Sets for Certain Uses
(Comment 5)--Commenters state that high-powered magnets have many
laudable uses, including for education and research in sciences, such
as biology, chemistry, and physics. Other commenters note that magnet
sets are used therapeutically for individuals with autism or attention-
deficit disorder. These commenters presume that the rule would
eliminate from the marketplace high-powered magnets intended for such
uses.
(Response 5)--Magnets have long played a role in education.
However, the specific products that are covered by the rule have been
on the market only since 2008. The rule will cover only ``any
aggregation of separable magnetic objects that is a consumer product
intended, marketed or commonly used as a manipulative or construction
item for entertainment, such as puzzle working, sculpture building,
mental stimulation, or stress relief.'' Magnets that are not subject to
the restrictions of the rule would continue to be available. For
example, less powerful magnets are sometimes included in science kits
to demonstrate magnetism. In addition, high-powered magnets that serve
industrial and commercial needs would not be covered by the rule.
Products that meet the definition of the ``magnet sets'' that do
not comply with this rule would no longer be available for purchase,
even if used by individuals to manage their attention deficit disorder
or attention deficit hyperactivity disorder (ADD/ADHD) symptoms.
However, magnets that are not restricted by the rule would still be
available for purchase and perhaps could be used to manage ADD/ADHD
symptoms. More generally, magnets are but one of many objects,
including various types of stress balls, ``worry-beads,'' and chiming
Baoding hand exercise balls that are available for the uses commenters
cite. A variety of other products are marketed specifically as ``fidget
toys'' to help children manage ADD/ADHD symptoms. Staff is aware of one
study in which the authors reported successful use of simple stress
balls to help sixth graders maintain focus in the classroom (Stalvey &
Brasell, Summer 2006). In short, some substitutes for magnet sets are
available for management of ADD/ADHD symptoms, and successful use of
these substitutes predates the availability of magnet sets.
Magnet sets present the same hazards to children with ADD/ADHD as
they do to children who do not have this condition. One comment
summarizes a study of 38 cases of magnet ingestion. Among those were
two children, a 12-year-old and a 14-year-old with ADHD, who swallowed
strong magnets, although of a type different than those typically found
in magnet sets. The first child required a laparoscopy; the other child
required extensive surgical intervention. One teacher who reported
giving magnets to children with ADD/ADHD in his middle school classes
commented that he ``needed to buy a new set every year,'' suggesting
the ease with which the pieces are lost over time and the difficulty
adults may have maintaining control of the sets.
(Comment 6)--Commenters note that magnet sets are fun stress-
relievers and have value as an artistic medium. The commenters also
note that sculpture made from the magnet sets that are the subject of
the rule constitute an art form that would be lost if the rule is
promulgated.
(Response 6)--The Commission is aware that magnet sets are used to
relieve stress; and likewise, the Commission is aware that some
individuals have developed a form of art with the magnets that would be
affected if the magnet sets used for this purpose are prohibited.
Although magnet sets of the type that have been involved in incidents
and are currently purchased by consumers for stress relief and
sculpture-making would not comply with the rule, magnet sets made from
weak magnets (i.e., with a flux index 50 kG\2\ mm\2\ or less) or from
magnets that do not fit within the small parts cylinder would be
allowed by the rule. Magnet sets that comply with the rule could serve
some of the purposes of magnet sets that are currently available. For
example, Liberty Balls, marketed by Assemble, LLC, and sold in sets of
eight large spheres, are an example of a type of magnet set that would
meet the performance requirements of the rule. Due to the large size of
the Liberty Balls magnets, their uses are more limited than the magnet
sets that are the subject of this rule. However, the existence of
Liberty Balls demonstrates the possibility that companies can develop
magnet sets that meet the standard and serve some of the uses of the
magnet sets that fail the standard.
Similarly, children's magnetic toys provide an example of how
magnet sets might be developed that would meet the standard. Children's
toy manufacturers have successfully adapted their magnetic construction
toys since the adoption of the requirements for toys with magnets in
the 2007 edition of ASTM F963, ``Standard Consumer Safety Specification
for Toy Safety.'' Following this example, individual magnets with a
flux index over 50 could be permanently connected by rods or other
means, such that the resulting magnetic objects are not small parts,
i.e., do not fit entirely within the small parts cylinder. Such a
magnet set might not be a perfect substitute for current magnet sets
but could fulfill some of the uses of current magnet sets, without
posing the risk of injury or death.
(Comment 7)--Noting the popularity of magnet sets for educational,
scientific, and therapeutic uses, some commenters claim that continued
demand for small, high-powered magnets would result in a ``black
market'' for the products after the rule is promulgated. Some
commenters state that there could be consumer-to-consumer sales of used
products, and others maintain that consumers would be able to purchase
magnet sets directly from noncomplying companies (including firms
located in China). A few commenters note that these black market magnet
sets are less likely to be sold with warning labels or other
accompanying information related to hazards.
(Response 7)--We acknowledge that there would continue to be a
demand for magnet sets by some consumers, which could lead to increases
in consumer-to-consumer sales and potentially black market sales of the
products. Furthermore, such sales are probably less likely to be
accompanied by labeling and warnings that alert buyers to the hazards
associated with
[[Page 59968]]
the products. CPSC enforcement activities and continued dissemination
of consumer information on the hazards of magnet sets might be
necessary to reduce the future sales of noncomplying products.
(Comment 8)--Some commenters opine that magnet sets that comply
with the size and flux index requirements of the rule will lose their
utility as manipulative desk toys. Other commenters suggest that weaker
magnets would be less safe because weaker, individual magnets could be
separated more easily from the magnet set during use, or separate more
readily within the gastrointestinal system if ingested while attached
to other magnets.
(Response 8)--The intent of the rule is to reduce or eliminate the
hazard presented by magnet sets currently on the market by requiring
that magnet sets and individual magnets for use with magnet sets that
are small enough to fit within the small parts cylinder must have a
flux index of 50 kG\2\ mm\2\ or less. The rule would still allow strong
magnet sets with magnets that do not fit entirely within the small
parts cylinder. Magnetic products sold as toys that comply with the toy
standard for children have included rods, balls, and various geometric
shapes that do not fit within the small parts cylinder. Such products
offer interesting entertainment, such as sculptures and construction
activities, but they are much larger and safer than the subject magnet
sets intended for adults. Another possibility would be to invent a
magnet set composed of magnets with a flux index below 50 kG\2\ mm.
Because there currently are no magnet sets on the market with magnets
that have a flux index of less than 50 kG\2\ mm\2\, we do not know how
such magnets would perform when used in the same way currently
available magnet sets perform.
Magnet sets that comply with the requirements of the rule would
contain magnets that are too large to be swallowed easily or would have
very weak attraction forces that would not pose the same ingestion
hazards as magnet sets currently on the market. Review of incident data
does not indicate that any injuries have been caused by magnets with
flux index values below 50 kG\2\ mm\2\.
(Comment 9)--Some commenters disparage the intended uses of magnet
sets, calling them, for instance, ``mindless desk ornaments,'' ``a
diversion,'' and ``frivolous items.'' These commenters cite the high
severity of the injuries associated with magnet sets and express dismay
that the CPSC ever allowed them to be sold.
(Response 9)--The CPSC does not perform premarket approvals of
consumer products; and typically, the CPSC will not engage in
enforcement or regulatory activity regarding a product, until
information is received or developed, which indicates that the product
may present an unreasonable risk of injury to consumers. Reasonable
parties may differ on the value to society of manipulative toys;
however, many types of manipulative toys exist for children and adults.
Impacts of the Rule on Businesses and Jobs
(Comment 10)--Many commenters note that the rule would harm firms
that import magnet sets and will result in lost jobs for employees of
these firms.
(Response 10)--In the preliminary initial regulatory analysis,
staff noted that the economic impact of the rule would be most severe
for the seven firms that account for the great majority (perhaps more
than 98%) of units sold as of June 2012. Five of these importers
reportedly derived most or all of their revenues from the sale of the
magnet sets that do not meet the performance requirements of the rule.
The other two leading importers of magnet sets reportedly had fairly
broad product offerings, which could lessen the severity of the
economic impact of the rule. As a result of compliance activity pursued
by the Commission's Office of Compliance and Field Operations, four of
these seven importers agreed voluntarily to stop selling magnet sets
that would not be compliant under this rule. One additional firm,
Maxfield & Oberton Holdings, LLC, ceased operations. This firm
(marketer of ``Buckyballs'') is believed to account for nearly 90
percent of magnet set sales through June 2012. Only one of the seven
small importers, Zen Magnets, LLC, continues to market magnet sets that
are subject to the rule. This firm apparently derives all of its
revenues from the sale of magnet sets. Unless the firm can successfully
market magnet sets that comply with the rule or other products, the
firm might go out of business when the rule takes effect.
A large share of magnet sets have been sold directly to consumers
by importers who used their own Internet Web sites or other Internet
shopping sites, but the rule would also affect retailers of the
products, whether the products are sold online or physically in stores.
However, these retailers are not likely to derive significant
proportions of total revenues from sales of affected magnet sets.
Accordingly, the impacts on individual firms should be minimal.
The commenters are correct that the rule, by prohibiting the sale
of noncompliant magnet sets in the United States, may also result in
some job losses. However, the impact on job losses is probably limited
because magnetic balls generally are produced outside the United States
and are merely packaged and/or distributed by U.S. importers.
Costs and Benefits of the Rule
(Comment 11)--One commenter opines that the preliminary regulatory
analysis overstates the societal costs of injuries from magnet sets
because incidents involving other small magnets are improperly
attributed to the magnet sets that are the subject of the proposed
rule. In addition, this commenter opines that the injury costs used in
the analysis were higher than indicated by the CPSC's Revised Injury
Cost Model (ICM).
(Response 11)--Both the initial and final regulatory analyses
acknowledge that there is some uncertainty concerning the estimated
annual average of medically attended injuries, noting that some of the
cases described as ``possibly'' involving magnet injuries, actually may
not have involved the magnets that are the subject of the rule. Hence,
it is possible that the analyses overstate the societal costs
associated with the magnets included in the rule. The final regulatory
analysis also points out that there were an additional 230 NEISS cases
(representing about 1,500 emergency department-treated injuries
annually) in which the magnet type was classified as ``unknown or
other.'' Thus, to the extent that this category of incidents involved
magnets covered by the rule, the analyses would tend to understate the
societal costs associated with the magnets subject to the rule.
Therefore, given the uncertainty concerning the societal costs
associated with the magnet sets, the analyses could be underestimating
or overestimating the societal costs.
Regarding the commenter's assertion that injury costs used in the
preliminary regulatory analysis were higher than indicated by the ICM,
we note that the commenter fails to take into account updates to the
ICM based on new and improved cost databases. The ICM is fully
integrated with NEISS and provides estimates of the societal costs of
injuries reported through NEISS. The major aggregated components of the
ICM include: Medical costs; work losses; and the intangible costs
associated with lost quality of life or pain and suffering. The ICM is
described further in section H.3.a of the preamble. The commenter also
does not
[[Page 59969]]
take into consideration that the cost estimates in the preliminary
regulatory analysis were age and sex specific and involved only those
under the age of 15 who had ingested magnets from magnet sets.
Furthermore, the commenter apparently also includes injury costs
associated with the diagnosis category ``foreign body,'' i.e., foreign
objects propelled into the victim's body, which is a different hazard
pattern than ``ingested foreign objects.'' The costs of injuries
resulting from foreign objects being propelled into a victim's body are
only about half of the costs of injuries associated with ingested
foreign objects. Finally, the commenter applies inappropriate inflators
in adjusting the injury cost estimates to 2011 dollars. The Commission
maintains that the estimated injury costs associated with ingestions of
small, high-powered magnets in the preliminary regulatory analysis and
final regulatory analysis involved proper application of the ICM.
Risk and Severity of Injury
(Comment 12)--The Commission received a significant number of
comments from health care professionals with personal experience in
treating children who either narrowly avoided, or actually sustained,
injuries following ingestion of small, high-powered magnets.
Virtually all comments received from medical professionals express
support for a rule eliminating magnet sets of the type that have been
involved in incidents. The medical professionals point out that
injuries caused by the ingestion of high-powered magnets are often
difficult to diagnose because of the inability of standard diagnostic
tools to demonstrate that the ingested item is a magnet; there are
similarities between symptoms resulting from magnet ingestion injuries
and less serious conditions like the flu; and the victims are unable or
unwilling to communicate to their caregivers or medical personnel that
they have ingested magnets. The medical professional commenters express
concern with the rapidly growing number of cases and note that magnet
ingestions often result in rapid and severe injuries with devastating
and costly long-term consequences.
(Response 12)--The Commission is aware of the severity of the
injuries that often result from the ingestion of small, high-powered
magnets from magnet sets and the difficulties frequently encountered by
medical professionals in diagnosing and treating these injuries. The
Commission is also aware that there are costs associated with the
treatment of injuries resulting from the ingestion of these magnets
that will be reduced substantially if magnet sets must comply with the
rule. (See Section H of this preamble).
(Comment 13)--Commenters argue that high-powered magnet sets should
not be prohibited because the number of injuries is low--43 reported
injuries possibly involving magnet sets during the period from January
2009 to June 2012--considering that approximately 2.7 million magnet
sets have been sold since 2009. These commenters also note that there
have been no fatalities associated with the product.
(Response 13)--The number of incidents reported to the Commission,
now totaling 100 cases through June 24, 2014, cannot be used to
estimate the number of injuries in the U.S. population because case
reports are anecdotal and are not based on a probability based sampling
design. The anecdotal incidents reported to CPSC constitute a minimum
number of incidents in the U.S. However, the incidents reported to CPSC
through hospital emergency departments and captured in the NEISS
database can be used to estimate the number of incidents nationwide
because NEISS data come from a probability based stratified random
sample of U.S. hospitals with emergency departments. An analysis of
incidents obtained through the NEISS estimates that 2,900 possible
magnet set, emergency department-treated ingestions occurred in the
United States from January 1, 2009 through December 31, 2013. This
amounts to approximately one incident per 930 magnet sets. We do not
agree that this is a low figure for injuries. In addition, we are aware
of one fatality involving a 19 month-old female, who died from ischemic
bowel caused by the ingestion of magnets from a magnet set.
Furthermore, the benefits of the rule, notwithstanding the public's
desire for current magnet sets that do not meet the rule, bear a
reasonable relationship to the costs of the rule.
(Comment 14)--Several commenters point out that the dangers posed
by the ingestion of small, high-powered magnets are not obvious.
(Response 14)--Staff agrees that the unique hazard resulting from
the ingestion of small, strong magnets is unlikely to be obvious to the
general public. People are generally aware of the choking hazard posed
by small balls and other small parts, but they do not understand how
the characteristics of magnets can cause injuries that are different
from, and more severe than, swallowing another small object. Despite
the publicity and response generated by the NPR, as well as the
Commission's compliance and communications activities, some commenters
misunderstand the hazard. Many commenters seem unaware that the
majority of victims are older children and teens, and the commenters
focus exclusively on the risk to young children. Similarly, commenters
tend to mention magnets as a choking hazard, comparable to choking on
foods, such as hot dogs and non-food small parts. In reality, choking
is not the injury mechanism related to magnets. The ways that children
and teens interact with magnets are not obvious and seem unclear to
many commenters. For example, some commenters write derisively about
``people letting their children eat magnets.'' However, most incidents
are unwitnessed, and based on data from choking and poisoning incidents
in which children intentionally ingest non-food items, it is likely
that only the youngest children voluntarily swallow magnets. This is
because choking on non-food items occurs predominantly among children
younger than three years, and ingestion of poisonous substances
declines as children approach five years of age.
(Comment 15)--Other commenters point out that the Commission has
not prohibited certain products, such as trampolines, balloons, and
hazardous household chemicals, which commenters contend present a
greater risk of injury to children than magnet sets. They assert that
this weighs against a rule prohibiting certain magnet sets that do not
meet the rule's performance requirements.
(Response 15)--Magnet sets, and the hazard patterns associated with
them, are quite different from other products. Because of these
differences, comparisons of injury rates between magnet sets and other
products are not meaningful. Key differences include: the obviousness
of the hazard; the severity of the resulting injury; the difficulty in
diagnosing the resulting injury; the numbers of products in use; the
breadth of products covered in the product category; the age of the
victims sustaining injuries; and the existence of requirements to
address the hazard.
Responsibility of Caregivers for Injuries Resulting From Magnet
Ingestion
(Comment 16)--Several commenters claim that the incidents involving
magnet sets are caused by negligent caregivers, who should supervise
their children better. However, other commenters opine that caregiver
supervision was not a relevant factor in determining the causation of
the incidents.
(Response 16)--The issue of caregiver supervision is related to
caregiver
[[Page 59970]]
compliance with warnings and other hazard communications. Consumers may
be aware of a hazard, but they may not make changes in their behavior
that would avoid the hazard. Securing or preventing access to magnet
sets would be especially difficult regarding older children and
adolescents because they are strongly independent and resourceful.
Expecting caregivers to supervise these children constantly is
unrealistic. Magnet ingestions can happen quickly, and the Commission
believes that it is also unrealistic to expect caregivers to maintain
continuous, focused attention on younger children, especially children
at the upper end of the at-risk age range. Indeed, research has found
that people cannot be perfectly attentive, particularly over long
periods of time, regardless of their desire to do so.\3\ Caregivers are
likely to be distracted, at least occasionally, because they must
perform other tasks, are responsible for supervising more than one
child, are exposed to other salient but irrelevant stimuli, or are
subject to other stressors.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\3\ Wickens, C. D., & Hollands, J. G. (2000). Engineering
psychology and human performance (3rd Ed.). Upper Saddle River, NJ:
Prentice Hall.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Moreover, caregivers are unlikely to maintain high levels of
vigilance, unless they believe that such vigilance is necessary. If
caregivers who own magnet sets believe they have properly secured the
sets or think that their children are not aware of the sets, caregivers
are unlikely to assume that constant supervision is needed.
Furthermore, children may be exposed to these magnet sets in locations
where caregivers cannot supervise the children or do not have direct
control over the amount of supervision required, such as at school or
in other households. Adolescents, in particular, are strongly
independent, and it is unrealistic to expect caregivers to supervise
adolescents constantly.
Alternatives to the Rule: Warnings and Education Programs
(Comment 17)--Many commenters state that current warnings are
sufficient to address the risk of injury presented by magnet sets, or
they express the belief that more robust and prevalent warnings and
educational programs are a better alternative than a rule prohibiting
products that do not meet the rule's performance requirements. Some
commenters state that the assumption that warnings do not work
undermines past safety standards accepted by the CPSC and, in fact,
calls into question the entire safety-monitoring process.
(Response 17)--As discussed in the Human Factors staff memorandum
that was part of the NPR briefing package, warnings are widely
recognized as a less reliable approach to controlling hazards than
design or guarding approaches. Unlike these latter approaches, which
directly limit hazard exposure, warnings and other hazard
communications must first educate consumers about the hazard and then
persuade consumers to change their behavior to avoid the hazard. In
addition, to be effective, warnings must rely on consumers to behave
consistently, regardless of situational or contextual factors (e.g.,
fatigue, stress, social influences) that influence precautionary
behavior.
The Commission's position is not that warnings are uniformly
ineffective. However, consumer compliance with warnings depends
strongly on the specific circumstances surrounding the hazard. Several
factors suggest that compliance with warning labels related to magnet
sets is likely to be low because consumers may not notice and attend to
the warnings. Exposure to ingestion warnings is likely to be very
limited because: (1) The individual magnets are too small to contain
on-product warnings; (2) the magnet sets do not inherently require
consumers to return the magnets to a storage case or other package
after every use, in packaging that might include a warning; and (3) the
magnet sets can be manipulated without the necessity of referring to
instructions that might include a warning. In addition, the nature of
the magnet-ingestion hazard and the resulting injuries can be difficult
to convey to consumers; and the resulting injuries have been
misunderstood even by medical personnel and by commenters to the NPR,
some of whom erroneously identify choking on the magnets as the hazard
presented by this product. Without a clear understanding of this
information and how magnet ingestions differ from other small-part
ingestions, consumers are unlikely to comply with a warning.
We acknowledge that developing understandable warnings aimed at
parents and other caregivers may be possible; and we acknowledge that
caregivers who receive such warnings may attempt to keep these products
out of the hands of young children. However, as noted, consumer
compliance with warnings depends strongly on the specific circumstances
surrounding the hazard. Several factors suggest that compliance with
warning labels related to magnet sets is likely to be low, even if
consumers understand the hazard and its consequences. For example, the
cost of compliance associated with magnet-ingestion warnings is high.
``Cost of compliance'' is defined as any cost, such as time, effort, or
inconvenience that is required to comply with a warning; compliance is
negatively associated with cost. The warnings on the packaging and
instructional material for some magnet sets instruct consumers to
secure the magnets and keep them away from all children ages 14 years
and younger. As evidenced in the comments, many consumers are likely to
reject these warnings as lacking credibility. We recognize that
caregivers who receive warnings about magnet sets may attempt to keep
these products out of young children's hands. However, warnings are
likely to be particularly ineffective among caregivers with older
children and adolescents because caregivers would not expect these
children to mouth toys and other objects as frequently as younger
children. Furthermore, even if caregivers attempt to comply with
warnings about the magnet-ingestion hazard, preventing a child's access
to these magnets still might prove quite difficult. The time and effort
to secure the product after every use, and the difficulties associated
with trying to identify a suitably secure location to store the
product, may deter consumers from heeding the warnings.
Some adolescents have cognitive and motor skills similar to an
adult's, making it extremely challenging to keep the product out of
adolescents' hands, despite caregivers' efforts. Although adolescents
also may be capable of understanding warnings about magnet ingestions,
their behavior is influenced strongly by social and peer pressures, and
adolescents are known to test limits and bend rules.\4\ Thus, warnings
against using magnets to simulate tongue or facial piercings are
unlikely to be very effective among this age group, unless such
piercings are viewed as socially unacceptable among their peers.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\4\ Brown, T., & Beran, M. (2008). Developmental stages of
children. In R. Lueder & V. J. B. Rice (Eds.), Ergonomics for
children: Designing products and places for toddlers to teens (pp.
13-30). New York: Taylor & Francis. Kalsher, M. J., & Wogalter, M.
S. (2008). Warnings: Hazard control methods for caregivers and
children. In R. Lueder & V. J. B. Rice (Eds.), Ergonomics for
children: Designing products and places for toddlers to teens (pp.
509-539). New York: Taylor & Francis. Zackowitz, I.B., &
Vredenburgh, A.G. (2005). Preschoolers, adolescents, and seniors:
Age-related factors pertaining to forensic human factors analyses.
In Y. I. Noy & W. Karwowski (Eds.), Handbook of human factors in
litigation (Chapter 35). Boca Raton, FL: CRC Press.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Educational programs may offer more opportunities to present the
information in varied ways and in greater detail than is possible via a
warning label.
[[Page 59971]]
However, mere knowledge or awareness of a hazard is not enough. Such
programs suffer from limitations similar to those of warnings because,
like all hazard communications, the effectiveness of educational
programs depends upon the affected consumers, not only in terms of
receiving and understanding the message, but also in being persuaded to
heed the message. Magnet sets present an especially difficult challenge
for public education programs because the hazard is obscure and
difficult to convey in simple terms. Furthermore, teenagers are a
significant part of the at-risk population, and they provide distinct
challenges to the effectiveness of public education programs. Thus,
even education programs that clearly communicate the hazard to
consumers will not necessarily motivate appropriate behavioral change
or reduce the frequency of incidents.
Alternatives to the Rule: Bitterants
(Comment 18)--A small number of commenters discuss bitterants (also
known as aversives) as an option. Some conclude that adding a bitter
coating to magnets would be an effective alternative to the prohibition
of magnet sets that do not meet the rule's performance requirements. A
few commenters assert that the method is unproven and question that
approach for various reasons.
(Response 18)--In principle, adding an aversive agent to a product
is a rational approach to reducing the risk of mouthing and ingestion.
Laboratory studies have shown this approach to be effective among
children and adults in deterring repeated ingestion of various
substances. Yet, real-world investigations have not demonstrated the
effectiveness of bitterants in preventing poisonings.\5\ CPSC staff's
1992 final report of its study of the topic (https://www.cpsc.gov/library/foia/foia99/os/aversive.pdf. at p. 3) concluded that because
bitterants do not deter initial ingestion, ``[a]versive agents are
unlikely to protect children from being harmed after ingesting . . .
substances that can injure or kill after one or two swallows.''
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\5\ Cf. White, N. C., Litovitz, T., Benson, B. E., Horowitz, B.
Z., Marr-Lyon, L., & White, M. K. (2009). The impact of bittering
agents on pediatric ingestions of antifreeze. Clinical Pediatrics,
48(9), 913-921.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Bitterants are least likely to be effective among young children
who gain access to high-powered magnets. Despite rejecting bitter
substances in testing environments, children in home settings,
nevertheless, frequently ingest unpalatable substances, such as
gasoline, cleanser, toilet bowl cleaner, and ammonia. Younger children,
particularly those under 3 years of age, may swallow a number of
magnets at a time before reacting to any aversive agent applied to the
magnets.
Aversives may be a more effective deterrent for older children and
young teens, presuming these children are aware that the agent has been
applied to the magnets and they are familiar with its taste. For older
children who are not familiar with the taste of an aversive, the mere
presence of the agent would not deter mouthing the magnets or trying to
use them to mimic pierced lip or tongue jewelry. Older children and
teens may also give magnets to others to try as a prank. Preteens and
teens are prone to test what they have been told, particularly when
what they have been told involves restrictions of any sort. Thus,
warnings that the products taste bad may not prevent children in these
age groups from tasting the magnets. (Some proportion of the
population, possibly as high as 30 percent, may be insensitive to
bitterants such as denatonium benzoate.) However, children are likely
to reject magnets treated with bitterants, and the bitterant may indeed
deter repeated attempts among most children.
Ingestions could still occur even if a bittering agent is found
effective for this purpose. Ingestions may be intentional among the
youngest children, but ingestions are likely to be accidental among
older groups. The power of the magnetic forces inherent in these
products can cause magnets to move erratically as pieces repel or
attract, and movement of magnets toward the back of the throat could
trigger the reflex to swallow the magnets before the person can remove
them.
Alternatives to the Rule: Child-Resistant Packaging
(Comment 19)--Several commenters state that child-resistant (CR)
packaging requirements are a better alternative than the proposed
performance requirements. However, others believe that such
requirements would be ineffective in reducing or eliminating the risk
of injury.
(Response 19)--CR packaging could be devised to make an enclosed
magnet set inaccessible to most young children. However, compliance
with CR packaging is likely to be low and inconsistent; and the
effectiveness of this approach depends on the caregiver and other users
securing the magnets in the CR packaging after every use. This is
behavior that we consider unlikely to occur. Although CR closures have
been shown to be effective in reducing poisonings with various products
(e.g., Rodgers, 2002), non-use and incorrect use of CR closures on
products containing chemicals or pharmaceuticals--products consumers
are more likely to understand to be hazardous (as opposed to strong
magnet sets)--can result in many poisonings annually among children
younger than 5 years old. Furthermore, CR packaging, referred to as
``special packaging'' under the Poison Prevention Packaging Act, is
designed to be significantly difficult for children under 5 years of
age to open. 15 U.S.C. 1471(4). Thus, CR packaging is an impractical
approach for older children, whose cognitive and motor skills overlap
those of adults.
Flux Index
(Comment 20)--One commenter questions the relationship of the flux
index (FI) to anatomical data, which the commenter considers to be most
germane to the hazard. The commenter requests that the rule be modified
to redefine the criteria, ``by relying on objective anatomical data
tied to the potential risks associated with swallowing injuries and
refine the testing protocol to isolate the field strength and/or attach
forces that can reasonably be expected to develop at the distances
reflected by anatomical data.'' Referencing an ultrasound study, the
commenter asserts that the minimal gut wall thickness in children is
0.5 mm, and the commenter suggests that when measuring the magnet
maximum surface gauss reading, instead of measuring at a probe distance
of 0.25 to 0.51 mm above the magnetic pole surface, as currently
required in ASTM F963-11, it is more appropriate to base the measuring
distance on the minimum gut wall thickness. The commenter suggests that
using a probe separation distance of 1.0 mm (2 x 0.5 mm = 2 sections of
gut wall) makes more sense because 1 millimeter ``is the magnetic field
strength at that critical distance that may bear a rational
relationship to injuries.''
(Response 20)--Commission staff agrees that the strength of the
magnet field and the separation of the magnets, or lack thereof, are
important factors contributing to the risk of injury posed by any
strong magnet. The gastrointestinal (GI) system is folded on itself
within the abdominal cavity, and during transit through the GI system,
there are many opportunities for magnets in different GI locations to
pass nearby to each other and then interact when separated by only the
thin gut walls. Commission staff believes that measuring the maximum
surface gauss reading for the FI input at a set distance of 1.0 mm
(equivalent to two
[[Page 59972]]
thicknesses/layers of gut wall) is oversimplistic and inappropriate,
unless the maximum surface gauss reading measured at that 1.0
millimeter distance is essentially zero.
Although the suggested value of 1.0 millimeter is anatomically
valid, it is not particularly meaningful in terms of the injury
mechanism. This is because conventional magnets do not ``wait'' to get
within 1 millimeter of each other before they begin to interact, and
the gut wall cannot block magnetic forces. Rather, once a pair of
magnets comes within a distance where the extent or reach of their
magnetic fields allows them to interact, the result is near-
instantaneous attraction, with consequent near-instantaneous
compression of any trapped tissues. Although the thin wall of the small
intestine can be conveniently defined anatomically by its thickness,
the tissue offers minimal resistance to the compression forces of the
magnet. Thus, the tissue trapped between magnets may be compressed so
that the distance between the magnets is much smaller than 1.0
millimeter. The compression forces deprive the tissue of its blood
supply, and they also squeeze out the tissue fluids, rapidly reducing
the gut wall thickness to micron values, and essentially mummifying the
tissue in situ. The measurement distance for the FI in the rule is
closer to this negligible distance than the 1.0 millimeter distance
that the commenter suggests; and therefore, the measurement distance
for the FI in the rule is more appropriate for defining powerful
magnets capable of causing GI injuries.
(Comment 21)--Several commenters question whether a flux index
value of 50 kG\2\ mm\2\ is low enough to prevent harm.
(Response 21)--The development of the flux index requirement that
appears in ASTM F963, Consumer Safety Specification for Toy Safety,
which is now a mandatory CPSC standard, was outlined in the NPR. (77 FR
53781-82, September 4, 2012). ASTM F963-11 defines a ``hazardous
magnet'' and a ``hazardous magnet component'' as one that has a flux
index greater than 50 kG\2\ mm\2\ and that is a small object. ASTM set
the flux index value at 50 kG\2\ mm\2\, by measuring the weakest
magnets in children's toys that were suspected of causing injuries, and
then adding a safety factor. Review of incident data related to
children's toys and magnet sets does not indicate that any injuries
have been caused by individual magnets with flux index values below 70.
CPSC staff will continue to monitor incidents and seek information
about the lower-bound limits of the injury mechanism so that the
established method continues to be appropriate.
(Comment 22)--Several commenters question whether the rule is
adequate for assessing the hazard posed by an aggregation of individual
magnets, each of which has a flux index of 50 or less.
(Response 22)--The staff memorandum included in the NPR briefing
package acknowledged concerns with the existing ASTM F963 standard
method regarding aggregated magnets, as follows: ``A toy with multiple
weak small part magnets could present an issue that the existing ASTM
F963 magnet requirements do not address, namely: stacking or stringing
of magnets. . . . when these small part magnets are combined, they
could create a(n aggregated) magnet with an effective flux index over
50 kG\2\ mm\2\ depending upon their characteristics.'' (Notice of
Proposed Rulemaking for Hazardous Magnet Sets, Staff Briefing Package,
pp. 54-55). Individual magnets with a flux index of 50 kG\2\ mm\2\ or
less (which currently do not exist in the market) would be smaller and
more difficult to manipulate and have less attraction force than
magnets in existing magnet sets. Individual magnets with a flux index
of 50 kG\2\ mm\2\ or less could be mounted permanently or attached
side-by-side to create a magnetic object with multiple magnetic poles
on one surface. Doing so would create a multipole magnetic object that
has a higher attraction force than the individual magnets on its
surface. Because there currently are no magnet sets on the market with
magnets that have a 50 kG\2\ mm\2\ flux index or less, we do not know
how they would perform when used as a part of a magnet set.
(Comment 23)--One commenter disagrees with the proposed flux index
method, stating that the commenter's proprietary technology could be
used to make ``safe'' magnet sets, even if the flux index measurement
of individual magnets is greater than 50. The commenter uses a
proprietary technology to magnetize the surface of a single magnet to
create multiple poles (positive and negative regions) on the surface of
a single magnet. The commenter refers to these proprietary magnets as
``Polymagnets.[supreg]'' Essentially, this process creates a permanent
aggregation of north and south poles in the surface of a single magnet.
The commenter requests that the Commission narrow the scope of the rule
to apply only to magnet sets comprised of magnets having no more than
two magnetic pole regions on any exposed magnet surface, thereby,
exempting multiple pole magnets.
(Response 23)--The commenter's claim that a process exists that
could be used to make ``safe'' magnet sets, even if the flux index
measurement of individual magnets is greater than 50 kG\2\ mm\2\, is
based on proprietary technology, which, to our knowledge, has not been
applied to any magnet sets currently on the market. The commenter
concedes that he ``has not fully analyzed the use of a densely coded
pattern'' on small cubes or spheres and claims only that ``early
indications suggest that dramatic improvements to the magnetic field *
* * can be achieved'' using the proprietary technology. These
statements indicate that the commenter has not applied this technology
to small, high-powered magnet sets or even concluded that such an
application is scientifically possible or economically feasible. CPSC
is not aware of any magnet set products on the market that are
comprised of magnets with multipole surfaces using the commenter's
technology. Moreover, it is not likely that this process will be
applied to small, high-powered magnet sets in the foreseeable future.
Thus, the Commission does not believe that any exemption for these
types of magnets is necessary or appropriate, particularly because
currently, no Polymagnet[supreg] magnet sets exist that could be tested
to determine whether such magnet sets present an unreasonable risk of
injury.
(Comment 24)--The same commenter also states that the flux index
measurement method is imprecise because it provides a range of
acceptable distances between the gauss meter and the magnetic surface
being measured.
(Response 24)--The flux index measurement method specifies the use
of a gauss meter and an axial probe with a distance between the active
area (diameter of 0.76 +/- 0.13 mm) and probe tip of 0.38 +/- 0.13 mm.
This means the magnetic flux density is measured at a distance of
between 0.38 millimeters and 0.51 millimeters above the magnet surface.
The tolerance cited accounts for variations in the length of the axial
probe tip, which is a function of the equipment used, and therefore,
does not constitute a precise value.
F. Description of the Final Rule
The Commission is issuing a rule establishing a standard for magnet
sets and individual magnets that are marketed or intended for use with
or as magnet sets. This section of the preamble describes the rule,
including differences between the proposal and the final rule.
[[Page 59973]]
1. Scope, Purpose, and Effective Date--Sec. 1240.1
This section of the final rule states that the requirements in 16
CFR part 1240 are intended to reduce or eliminate an unreasonable risk
of injury to consumers who ingest magnets that are part of magnet sets
and individual magnets that are marketed or intended for use with or as
a magnet set. The standard applies to all magnet sets, as defined in
Sec. 1240.2, and relevant individual magnets manufactured or imported
on or after the date 180 days after publication of the final rule.
Individual magnets. The scope of the final rule has been revised
from the proposal so that the rule explicitly covers magnets that are
sold individually and are intended or marketed to be used in the same
way as magnet sets or as a part of a magnet set. The Commission is
aware of one firm that sells magnet sets and also sells single magnet
spheres at a per-magnet price through the same Web site on which the
firm promotes and sells sets of magnets. This firm sells individual
magnet spheres for 10 cents each and allows customers to purchase up to
1,152 magnets in a single order. The firm charges a shipping rate of
$5.00 for any quantity of individual magnets purchased. Another firm,
Star, which recently settled an administrative complaint with the
Commission, sold individual magnet spheres for between 9 and 19 cents
each (depending on the number ordered), and allowed customers to
purchase up to 10,000 magnets in a single order.
Because the proposed rule described the scope of the rule as
covering aggregations of magnets, magnets that are sold individually,
arguably would not be subject to the requirements of the safety
standard under the scope provision, as proposed. Thus, under the
proposed scope, firms might be able to circumvent the safety standard
requirements simply by pricing and selling magnet spheres individually
that are intended to be used as part of an aggregation of magnets as a
magnet set. Under the final rule, all magnet spheres intended for use
as magnet sets, as defined by the rule, are subject to the requirements
of the safety standard, whether they are sold individually or in the
aggregate.
Changing the word ``children'' to ``consumers.'' The proposed scope
section stated that the rule is intended to reduce or eliminate an
unreasonable risk of injury to children. The final rule changes the
word ``children'' to ``consumers'' to clarify that the rule is intended
to address risks posed to teens as well as young children. As the
incident data make clear, both teens and young children have been
harmed when swallowing magnets from magnet sets. Because the term
``children'' could be subject to interpretations that might exclude
teens, the final rule uses the term ``consumers.''
2. Definitions--Sec. 1240.2
This section of the final rule provides definitions for the terms
``magnet set'' and ``individual magnet.'' The final rule modifies the
proposed definition of ``magnet set'' to clarify certain aspects of the
definition. The Commission does not intend for these modifications to
change the scope of the rule from the proposal, but rather, to describe
more clearly the products subject to the rule. The final rule also adds
a definition for the term ``individual magnet.''
Definition of ``magnet set.'' To respond to comments on the NPR and
to provide greater precision, the Commission has modified the
definition of ``magnet set'' in the proposed rule by:
Removing the word ``permanent'';
Replacing the phrase ``intended or marketed by the
manufacturer primarily'' with the phrase ``intended, marketed or
commonly used'';
Replacing the word ``desk toy'' with ``item''; and
Specifying factors that could indicate whether a magnet
set meets the definition.
The final rule definition removes the word ``permanent'' from the
phrase ``separable, permanent magnetic objects'' because the word
``permanent'' is superfluous. Any magnet, whether it maintains its
magnetic strength permanently or not, can cause serious damage to
intestinal tissue, if ingested.
The final rule replaces the phrase, ``intended or marketed by the
manufacturer primarily,'' with the phrase: ``intended, marketed or
commonly used.'' The revision seeks to prevent a manufacturer or
importer of magnet sets from avoiding the rule by simply stating in
marketing and other materials that the magnets are intended for uses
other than those specified in the definition. For example, this
modification will preclude firms from claiming that their products are
intended as science kits to avoid the rule, if, in fact, the products
are commonly used as magnet sets (i.e., as a manipulative or
construction item for entertainment, such as puzzle working, sculpture
building, mental stimulation, or stress relief). Common uses may be
indicated by information found in consumer reports to the CPSC, firm
reports to the CPSC, injury reports, and consumer comments/reviews
posted on product Web sites stating that a product, regardless of
whether it is intended or marketed by the manufacturer as such, was, in
fact, being used as a manipulative or construction item for
entertainment, such as puzzle working, sculpture building, mental
stimulation or stress relief. This change clarifies that the common
usage of a firm's magnet products could be a consideration in
determining whether the magnets are intended for use as manipulatives
for entertainment, irrespective of the firm's stated intentions.
The final rule definition replaces the term ``desk toy'' with
``item'' to prevent excluding magnet sets from the scope of the rule if
a particular product is not explicitly labeled or expressly marketed as
a desk toy.
The final rule specifies factors that are relevant in determining
the intended uses of a magnet set. These are factors that Commission
staff may consider in determining whether a product falls under the
definition of ``magnet set.'' Explicitly stating these factors in the
rule should provide clearer direction to firms and the public about
what products will be covered by the rule. We may consider the manner
in which the individual magnet or magnet set is promoted, marketed, and
advertised. As part of this inquiry, staff may review the labeling and
packaging of the product, information on the firm's Web site about
intended uses of the product, information in other promotional
materials, and where and how the product is displayed at retail stores
or on the Internet. In addition, we may consider the uses for which the
product is commonly recognized by consumers. Information provided by
consumers and firms, injury reports, and consumers' online reviews or
comments for the product are examples of sources that could be useful
to determine what consumers consider to be the uses of the product.
In developing this part of the ``magnet set'' definition, the
Commission considered regulatory and statutory provisions that describe
factors to be used in determining the intended use of a product. The
Commission's small parts regulation specifies factors relevant to a
determination of which toys and other articles are intended for use by
children under 3 years of age. 15 U.S.C. 1501.2(b). The small parts
regulation states: ``In determining which toys and other articles are
intended for use by children under 3 years (36 months) of age, for
purposes of this regulation, the following factors are relevant: the
manufacturer's stated intent (such as on a label) if it is a reasonable
one; the advertising,
[[Page 59974]]
promotion, and marketing of the article; and whether the article is
commonly recognized as being intended for children under 3.'' Id. The
definition of ``children's product'' in the CPSA lists factors to
consider in determining whether a product is primarily intended for
children 12 years of age or younger. 15 U.S.C. 2051(a)(2). The ``magnet
set'' definition draws from both the regulatory definition in the small
parts rule and the statutory definition of ``children's product'' to
specify factors, which include the manufacturer's stated intent,
information provided with or on the product, and the commonly
recognized uses of the product.
The definition does not include other magnetic products, such as
toys intended for children and jewelry. Magnets that are part of a toy
intended for children are already covered by the requirements in ASTM
F963-11, which is a mandatory CPSC standard. The definition also does
not include magnets intended for industrial or commercial applications,
such as motor components, magnetic bearings, magnetic couplings,
welding clamps, oil filters, disc drives, loudspeakers, headphones,
microphones, instrumentation, switches, and relays.
Definition of ``individual magnet.'' The final rule adds a
definition of ``individual magnet.'' As discussed above, the Commission
is aware that the firm that currently sells magnet sets that would be
prohibited by the rule also sells individual magnets for use with
magnet sets. The Commission seeks to prevent firms from circumventing
the rule by selling individual magnets for the same uses as the magnet
sets that have been involved in incidents, and at the same time
claiming that the individual magnets are not subject to the rule
because the magnets are not sold as sets. The individual magnets
covered by the rule are only the magnets that are intended or marketed
for use with or as a magnet set. The Commission does not intend to
cover the many types of individual magnets that are sold for other
uses, such as refrigerator magnets, collar stays, or various commercial
and industrial uses.
3. Requirements--Sec. 1240.3
This section sets forth the requirements for magnet sets. If a
magnet set contains a magnet that fits within the small parts cylinder
that CPSC uses for testing toys, all magnets from that set must have a
flux index of 50 kG\2\ mm\2\ or less. Because the final rule covers
individual magnets that are intended or marketed for use with or as a
magnet set, the requirements section of the final rule states that
individual magnets, as defined in the rule, must meet the requirements.
The proposed rule set out the small parts and the flux index
requirements in two subsections of Sec. 1240.3. The final rule
consolidates these provisions into one section.
The small parts cylinder referenced in the rule is specified in 16
CFR part 1501--Method for Identifying Toys and Other Articles Intended
for Use by Children Under 3 Years of Age Which Present Choking,
Aspiration, or Ingestion Hazards Because of Small Parts. If an object
fits completely within the small parts cylinder, this indicates that
the object is small enough to be ingested. If a magnet that is part of
a magnet set (or an individual magnet, as defined) is too large to fit
within the small parts cylinder, the magnet meets the standard,
regardless of the magnet's flux index.
Small magnets (i.e., those that fit within the small parts
cylinder) that are part of a magnet set (and individual magnets, as
defined) must have a flux index of 50 kG\2\ mm\2\ or less. This limit
is based on the level that is specified in ASTM F963-11. As discussed
in the preamble to the NPR (77 FR 53781), the flux index of a magnet is
an empirical value developed by ASTM to estimate the attraction force
of a magnet. The flux index limit of 50 kG\2\ mm\2\ was developed by
ASTM, with CPSC staff's participation, to address injuries resulting
from strong magnets that separate from toys. Because the magnets from
toys involved in incidents had flux index measurements greater than 70
kG\2\ mm\2\,the ASTM working group chose a flux index of 50 kG\2\ mm\2\
as a cutoff because that value was significantly below the value for
the magnets involved in incidents.
4. Test Procedure for Determining Flux Index--Sec. 1240.4
This section of the rule describes how to determine the flux index
of magnets that are part of a magnet set. If the magnet set contains
more than one shape or size of magnet, at least one of each shape and
size is selected for testing. The flux index of the selected magnets is
measured in accordance with the procedure set forth in sections 8.24.1
through 8.24.3 of ASTM F963-11, Standard Consumer Safety Specification
for Toy Safety. The flux index of the magnet is calculated by
multiplying the square of the magnet's surface flux density (in
KGauss), by its maximum cross-sectional area (in mm\2\). The ASTM
standard uses a gauss meter and probe that measures the surface flux
density at 0.015 inches (0.38 mm) above the magnet's surface. The area
is measured at the largest cross-section of the magnet that is
perpendicular to the axis of its magnetic poles.
In the NPR, we noted that the products at issue are typically
aggregations of magnets, rather than individual magnets that often
separate from toys. We also observed that when magnets are aggregated,
their magnetic strength may increase. We requested comments on whether
it may be desirable to develop a method for testing the strength of
aggregated magnets in addition to the method for testing the strength
of individual magnets. We received no comments proposing methodologies
for testing the strength of an aggregation of magnets. Furthermore,
because there are no magnet sets currently on the market with magnets
that have a 50 kG\2\ mm\2\ flux index or less, we believe that the
aggregation scenario is adequately addressed in the rule.
5. Findings--Sec. 1240.5
In accordance with the requirements of the CPSA, we have made the
findings stated in section 9 of the CPSA. The findings are discussed in
section N of this preamble.
G. Alternatives
The Commission has considered alternatives to reduce the risk of
injury related to the ingestion of magnets contained in magnet sets.
However, as discussed below, the Commission does not believe that any
of these alternatives would adequately reduce the risk of injury.
1. Voluntary Recalls
Although most of the companies that manufacture or import magnet
sets have voluntarily agreed to stop selling (and in some cases recall)
these products, and several retailers have agreed to recall and stop
sale, the Commission has been unsuccessful in negotiating voluntary
recalls and stop sales with one company that continues to market magnet
sets. Pursuing voluntary recalls with current and possibly future
manufacturers and importers of magnet sets would be reactive and would
entail waiting for new incidents to occur rather than preventing them.
Moreover, recalls would not prevent new entrants into the market in the
future; a rule will set requirements that all products must meet from
the effective date of the rule going forward.
2. Voluntary Standard
Currently, there is no applicable voluntary standard in effect.
Before publication of the NPR, a group of magnet set importers and
distributors requested that ASTM International
[[Page 59975]]
develop a voluntary standard for the labeling and marketing of these
products. Specifically, these companies requested the creation of a
voluntary standard to: (1) Provide for appropriate warnings and labels
on packages of these magnets sets; and (2) establish guidelines for
restricting the sale of these magnet sets to children, by not selling
to stores that sell children's products exclusively, and advising
retailers not to sell the magnet sets in proximity to children's
products. To date, ASTM has not formed a committee to consider the
development of a voluntary standard for magnet sets.
Moreover, whether such a voluntary standard would be effective in
reducing or eliminating the risk of injury associated with magnet sets
is questionable. Despite companies' marketing and labeling their
products in an attempt to limit children's exposure to magnets,
ingestion incidents involving children have continued to occur; and
labeling does not change the attractiveness of the product to children
or the intrinsic play value of the magnet sets. From March 2010, when
the firm with the largest share of the market undertook certain
labeling enhancements and marketing restrictions, through June 2012,
the Commission learned of 47 additional incidents of ingestion of
magnets from magnet sets, 26 of which involved ingestion of that
company's magnets. As discussed more fully in the next section of this
preamble, we do not believe that warnings would adequately reduce the
injuries associated with magnet sets.
We also note that Zen Magnets has announced its own ``voluntary
standard'' for magnet sets requiring that:
Customers must be 18 years of age or older to purchase
magnets and that the sales location must have an age floor for persons
18 and older or 21 and older, or age must be otherwise verified by
Government ID; and
All stores must verbally remind customers to keep magnets
away from mouths.
We do not consider a standard issued by one company to be a
``voluntary standard'' as that term is used in the CPSA. Moreover, the
measures that Zen magnets announced would have the same limitations
discussed above.
3. Warnings
A possible alternative to the rule would be to require warnings
with or on magnet sets. As discussed in the NPR preamble and in
response to comments set forth in section E of this preamble, it is
unlikely that warnings on the packages of magnet sets would
significantly reduce the ingestion-related injuries caused by high-
powered magnets. Safety and warnings literature consistently identifies
warnings as a less effective hazard-control measure than eliminating
the hazard through design or guarding the consumer from a hazard.
Warnings do not prevent consumer exposure to the hazard but rely on
persuading consumers to alter their behavior in some way to avoid the
hazard. With this product, warnings are particularly unlikely to reduce
or eliminate the ingestion of these magnets. Warnings are especially
unlikely to be effective among young children because children may lack
the cognitive ability to appraise a hazard or appreciate the
consequences of their own actions and may not understand how to avoid
hazards effectively.
Although older children are better at appreciating the hazards
described in a warning, peer acceptance and social influences can
strongly influence adolescent behavior. Because adolescents have a
tendency to test limits and bend rules, warnings about keeping the
product away from children could have the unintended effect of making
the product more appealing to some children. For example, warnings
against specific uses, such as mimicking piercings, might actually
encourage this behavior among older children. If children repeatedly
use the product in this way, without ingesting the magnets, these
children most likely will become convinced that the hazard is not
especially likely, or is not relevant to them.
In the NPR, we noted that staff generally found the content of
warnings accompanying magnet sets to be lacking in several ways. For
example, the warnings often did not describe the incident scenarios
prevalent among older children and adolescents, whom caregivers may not
believe are likely to put magnets into their mouth. Warnings lacked
detailed information that would allow consumers to understand how
swallowing magnets differs from swallowing other small parts, or how
magnets sticking together could pose a hazard because the magnets will
not simply pass through the child's system. Without a clear, explicit,
and accurate description of the nature of the hazard and its
consequences, consumers may find the warning implausible. Moreover,
even with enhanced warnings, consumers are unlikely to comply with the
action recommended in the warning.
Even if warnings could effectively communicate the ingestion
hazard, the consequences of ingesting magnets, and appropriate hazard-
avoidance measures, warnings still may not be effective if consumers do
not concur with the content of the warning. Warnings are particularly
likely to be ineffective among caregivers of older children. Unless
caregivers are convinced that their older child is likely to mimic lip,
nose, or similar piercings, or perform other activities that might lead
these adolescents to place magnets into their mouth or nose, caregivers
may doubt that the warnings are relevant to their child, despite the
warnings' assertions to the contrary.
As noted in the NPR preamble and in section E of this preamble,
even if caregivers believe the warnings, several factors may limit
compliance. Caregivers, particularly those with older children, might
feel significant social pressure from children who are accustomed to
using the magnet sets. Caregivers who own the product and attempt to
heed the warnings might find it quite difficult to prevent their
child's access to the magnets and still keep the product reasonably
accessible for their own use.
The cost of compliance with warnings for these products is high.
Caregivers may be reluctant to secure the product from a child after
every use. Identifying an appropriate location to store the magnet sets
may dissuade consumers from doing so, particularly for a product often
marketed to be for ``stress relief.'' Caregivers may underestimate
their child's abilities and place the product in locations that seem
secure but that are still accessible to the child. All of these factors
may lead caregivers to reject the warning message.
Based on these concerns about the likely ineffectiveness of
warnings for magnet sets, we do not believe that warning labels would
adequately reduce the risk of injury presented by these products.
4. Packaging Restrictions
Theoretically, magnet sets could be sold with special storage
containers to reduce the likelihood that children would access the
magnets. Possible storage might include a container that would clearly
indicate when a magnet is missing from the set. Such a requirement
might prevent injuries resulting from a small number of magnets being
separated from a set without the owner being aware. However, many
consumers may not use such containers because using them could require
time to gather the magnets and put them in the container, or consumers
may be reluctant to dismantle a shape or structure that took them time
and effort to construct. Thus, the effectiveness of such special
containers to reduce ingestions is doubtful. Finally, it is not clear
that the
[[Page 59976]]
Commission would have the regulatory authority to issue a rule
prescribing requirements for packaging, other than child-resistance
requirements (discussed below).
Another alternative might be to require that magnet sets be sold in
child-resistant packaging. Child-resistant packaging, also called
``special packaging,'' is packaging that is significantly difficult for
children under five years of age to open or obtain a harmful amount of
the substance. 15 U.S.C. 1471(4). The ability of such an approach to
reduce ingestion injuries of magnets from magnet sets would be limited.
Child-resistant packaging would not prevent teens and adolescents (and
even some younger children) from opening the packaging. Additionally,
the packaging would have to be secured after each use. According to the
Division of Human Factors, it is unlikely that adults would accept
child-resistant packaging for a product like the magnet sets because of
the level of inconvenience involved in returning the magnets to the
package.\6\ Additionally, for the reasons described above, consumers
may leave magnets out of their container.
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\6\ Sedney, C.A., & Smith, T.P. (2012). Human factors assessment
of strong magnet sets. CPSC memorandum to Jonathan D. Midgett,
Project Manager, U.S. Consumer Product Safety Commission, Bethesda,
MD.
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5. Restrictions on Sales of Magnet Sets
Another possible alternative to address the hazard of children
ingesting magnets from magnet sets might be to limit the places where
magnet sets are sold, keeping magnet sets away from toy stores,
children's sections of stores, and other such locations. Sales
limitations or requirements for strong warnings might also be required
on Web sites that offer magnet sets for sale on the Internet. However,
these restrictions are unlikely to reduce ingestions significantly
because children can access magnet sets from many sources other than
stores. Moreover, sales restrictions are unlikely to deter teens.
Finally, the Commission does not have the regulatory authority to
impose such sales restrictions by rule.
6. Adoption of a Standard With Different Performance Requirements
Another alternative to the rule would be to establish a different
set of requirements. For example, such requirements might allow a
different flux index for magnet sets, different specifications
regarding shapes and sizes of magnets within the scope of the standard,
or some other criteria that have yet to be developed (but would not be
as stringent as the rule requires). If different requirements would be
effective, they could reduce the risk of injury associated with magnet
sets, and at the same time, potentially allow the product to maintain
the qualities that would facilitate use by adults. It is unclear,
however, whether alternative requirements for the sizes and flux index
of magnets would eliminate or substantially affect the physical
qualities of the products that make them enjoyable for adults.
A competing concern is whether an alternative set of requirements
could reasonably be expected to reduce or eliminate the risk of injury
associated with magnet sets. Because the hazard presented by these
magnet sets is ingestion by children, we are concerned that any
requirements that allow magnets with a greater attractive force and
permit sizes or shapes that could fit through the small parts cylinder
would not address the risk of injury adequately.
As noted in Section E, some commenters suggest that, as an
alternative to the rule, the Commission could require manufacturers to
add an aversive (bittering) agent to the product. However, as discussed
in the response to Comment 18, aversives are unlikely to be effective
in deterring initial ingestion by young children because children
frequently ingest unpalatable substances.
7. No Action
Another option for the Commission is to take no regulatory action
to address the risk of injury posed by magnet sets. As the NPR preamble
mentioned, it is possible that, over time, increased awareness of the
hazard could result in some reduction in ingestions. The magnitude of
any such reduction in incidents is uncertain. The Commission could rely
entirely on enforcement activities, rather than regulatory action, to
address the risk of injury posed by magnet sets. However, as discussed
in the ``voluntary recall'' section above, several manufacturers/
importers of magnet sets have refused to participate in any recall or
stop sale of their products; and in any event, recalls and/or stop
sales conducted by these companies would not prevent new entrants into
the market in the future.
H. Final Regulatory Analysis
The Commission is issuing this rule under sections 7 and 9 of the
CPSA. The CPSA requires that the Commission prepare a final regulatory
analysis and publish the final regulatory analysis with the text of the
final rule. 15 U.S.C. 2058(f). This section of the preamble presents
the final regulatory analysis of the rule.
1. Need for and Description of the Rule
The CPSC has received information regarding injuries with, and
hazards posed by, sets of small, powerful magnets. Some of these
injuries have required surgical removal of individual magnets
originally contained in the sets and ultimately ingested by children.
Reported magnet ingestions have ranged from young children, who put the
magnets in their mouths, to adolescents and teens, who experimented
with the sensation of magnets (e.g., on their braces), or paired
magnets to mimic tongue or lip piercings. These behaviors have led to
the accidental swallowing of the powerful magnets, with unexpected, and
sometimes severe, medical consequences, including significant damage to
the gastrointestinal tract (Inkster, 2012) and death. From January 1,
2009 through December 31, 2013, there were an estimated 2,900 possible
magnet set, emergency department-treated ingestions. There was also one
fatal incident in 2013 (Garland, 2014).
The final rule establishes a standard limiting the size and
strength of magnets in a magnet set. The rule applies to any
aggregation of separable, magnetic objects that is a consumer product
intended, marketed, or commonly used as a manipulative or construction
item for entertainment, such as puzzle working, sculpture building,
mental stimulation, or stress relief.\7\ Under the rule, magnet sets
would not comply with the standard if: (1) The individual magnets are
small enough to fit into the small parts cylinder (e.g., a ball-shaped
magnet with a diameter of less than 31.7 mm, or 1.25 inches); and (2)
the individual magnets have a flux index of more than 50 kG\2\ mm\2\,
as measured by the procedures for determining the flux index described
in the toy standard. Because these requirements already apply to
magnets used in products marketed as toys for children, the rule
essentially extends the toy requirements to the subject magnet sets.
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\7\ Although the definition of ``magnet set'' changed slightly
from the NPR, and the rule extends to the individual magnets sold
for use as or with a magnet set, these changes did not affect the
scope of products considered in conducting the Final Regulatory
Analysis.
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The current designs of magnet sets containing small powerful
magnets of the type that are the subject of this regulatory proceeding
(which are typically comprised of individual ball-shaped magnets with
diameters of 5mm and, based on testing by CPSC staff, having flux index
values in the range of 400-500) would not meet the
[[Page 59977]]
requirements of the standard. To meet the requirements, the individual
magnets would have to be much weaker (i.e., have a flux index of 50
kG\2\ mm\2\ or less, rather than an index of 400 to 500); or the
magnets would have to be much larger (i.e., be at least 31.7 mm (1.25
inches) in diameter rather than 5 mm). Either requirement eliminates a
distinctive product attribute and would limit greatly the magnet sets
as candidates for manipulative novelty products. Magnets with a flux
index of 50 kG\2\ mm\2\ or less may be too weak for building sculptures
or too weak to be used in other construction activities; magnets with
diameters of 1.25 inches or more would be too large to have any
practical value in such activities.
Staff has identified magnet sets in the market, Liberty Balls,
marketed by Assemble, LLC, that would meet the definition of magnet
sets, would meet the performance standard, and might serve some of the
uses of magnet sets that would not meet the standard. The Liberty Balls
magnet sets consist of a set of eight large ball-shaped magnets. The
Liberty Balls magnet sets consist of a set of eight large ball-shaped
magnets selling for $30 to $40 per set. The Ball of Rights generally
consists of a set of two large ball-shaped magnets selling for $10 to
$13 per set. The balls in these sets are 33 mm (1.3 inches) in
diameter, and consist of ferrite magnets, rather than rare earth
materials (See https://unitedweball.org/, accessed February 25, 2014).
Even though these products satisfy the performance requirements of
the rule, for purposes of the economic analysis, we do not consider any
impacts due to the entry of Liberty Balls and Ball of Rights in the
market because we do not consider these sets to be good substitutes for
the subject magnet sets. To be considered a good or close substitute,
we would need to observe that consumers, who would have purchased the
subject magnet sets (if they had remained available at historical
prices and quantities) are now, to a large degree, purchasing the
Liberty Balls sets instead, and the available data suggest
otherwise.\8\ Moreover, Liberty Balls magnet sets are not marketed as a
substitute for the smaller and powerful neodymium magnets sets. Rather,
Liberty Balls apparently have been sold specifically to generate funds
to defend the producer against the recently settled lawsuit with the
CPSC (Helm, 2014).
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\8\ Sales of Liberty Balls have not come close to matching the
levels observed for the subject magnet sets (estimated at 800,000
sets and $20 million annually, and discussed below). Based upon
available information, sales revenue for Liberty Balls appears to
have amounted to about $200,000 during October and November 2013, or
about $100,000 per month. (See https://unitedweball.org/, accessed
February 25, 2014). By March 2014, reported sales revenue from
Liberty Balls had increased to about $250,000 (Helm, 2014),
suggesting that for December 2013 through February 2014, sales were
only about $15,000 (($250,000-$200,000)/3) per month. By comparison,
monthly sales for the subject magnet sets were about $1.7 million on
average. (CPSC staff conducted no independent evaluation of the
accuracy of these figures for Liberty Balls.)
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Rather than develop a complying alternative that serves the same
niche as the subject magnet sets, producers of magnet sets have opted
to exit the market altogether. Although Liberty Balls comply with the
standard, we base the benefit cost analysis presented below on the
disappearance of the noncompliant magnet sets containing small powerful
magnets from the market.
2. Description of the Product and Market
Magnet sets that would be affected by the scope of the rule are
comprised of small, powerful magnetic balls, cubes, and/or cylinders
that can be arranged in many different geometric shapes. These magnet
sets were introduced in 2008, but 2009 marked the first year with
significant sales to U.S. consumers.\9\ Most magnet sets have been sold
in sets of either 125 balls or sets of 216 to 224 balls; although some
firms have sold just a few balls as extras or replacements, others have
sold large sets of more than 1,000 magnetic balls.
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\9\ However, small neodymium-iron-boron magnets previously have
been, and continue to be, marketed by firms such as magnet suppliers
and distributors of educational products.
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Product information provided by marketers indicates that the most
common magnet size is approximately 5 millimeters in diameter; although
balls as small as about 3 millimeters have been sold, in addition to
sets of larger magnet balls (perhaps 15 millimeters to 25 millimeters
in diameter).\10\ In addition to magnetic ball sets, sets of small
magnetic cubes have also been sold, although magnetic cubes have
comprised a relatively small share of the market. In 2012, the leading
marketer of magnet sets also added to its desk toy product line small
magnetic rods intended to be used with magnetic balls to make geometric
shapes.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\10\ One firm's larger magnet balls are reportedly made with
cores of strontium ferrite
(SrO[middot]6Fe2O3), rather than neodymium-
iron-boron.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Based on information reviewed on product sales, including reports
by firms provided to the Office of Compliance and Field Operations, the
number of such magnet sets that were sold to U.S. consumers from 2009
through mid-2012 may have totaled about 2.7 million sets, with a value
of roughly $50 million. This value reflects a combination of retail
sales directly to consumers (through company Web sites and other
Internet retail sites) and sales to retailers who marketed the
products. A review of retail prices reported by importers, and observed
on Internet sites during that period, suggested prices typically
ranging from about $20 to $45 per set, with an average price of about
$25. Larger sets of more than 1,000 individual magnets reportedly were
sold at prices as high as $300, depending on the number of magnets and
the type of packaging. Such larger sets only accounted for about 0.5
percent of all sets (and a little over 2 percent of all magnets) sold
to consumers during the period from 2009 to mid-2012.
The small, powerful magnets to be affected by the rule are made of
alloys of neodymium, iron, boron, or other rare earth metals. This
composition has been confirmed in analyses of product samples by CPSC
staff from the Directorate for Laboratory Sciences. The magnetized
neodymium-iron-boron cores are coated with a variety of metals and
other materials to make them more attractive to consumers and to
protect the brittle magnetic alloy materials from breaking, chipping,
and corroding. Nearly 100 percent of neodymium and other rare earth
metals are now mined in China, which also reportedly holds close to a
worldwide monopoly on the production of neodymium-iron-boron magnets
(Dent, 2012). Based on available information, all of the small magnets
used in magnet sets, as well as most of the finished and packaged
products that would be subject to CPSC regulation, are produced by
manufacturers located in China.\11\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\11\ One importer reported to a CPSC Compliance investigator
that some of the magnet sets it sold and shipped to U.S. consumers
were made from bulk magnets received from its supplier in China that
the importer packaged for sale.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
a. Importers of Magnet Sets
As noted above, none of the magnets found in sets that are within
the scope of the rule are produced domestically. Nearly all of the
firms that have marketed magnet sets are believed to have imported them
packaged and labeled for sale to U.S. consumers. Several Chinese
manufacturers have the facilities and production capacity to meet the
orders of U.S. importers.
The Directorate for Economic Analysis identified about 25 U.S.
firms and individuals who imported magnet sets for sale in the United
States in 2012. The combined sales of the top seven firms have probably
accounted for
[[Page 59978]]
the great majority (perhaps more than 98%) of units sold since the
product was introduced in 2008. One firm, Maxfield & Oberton Holdings,
LLC, is believed to have held a dominant position in the market for
magnet sets from its entry in the market in 2009, until it ceased
operations late in 2012. That firm, and a few of the larger firms
(including a firm based in Canada with a branch office in the United
States), have marketed the products through accounts with retailers, in
addition to selling directly to consumers on the Internet, using their
own Web sites or other Internet shopping sites.
Some of the firms with smaller sales volumes reported to Compliance
staff that they mainly marketed products (sourced from manufacturers in
China) through Internet sales arrangements with Amazon.com, which held
stock for them and processed orders. A review of the product listings
of the Internet retailer found that several other firms had similar
business models. Other U.S. firms and individuals have sold magnet sets
they imported from China through Internet ``stores'' they maintain on
eBay. In addition to products offered for sale by U.S. importers,
consumers have also been able to purchase magnet sets directly from
sources in Hong Kong or China, many of which marketed products through
``stores'' on eBay.\12\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\12\ More than 40 such stores shipping magnet sets directly from
Hong Kong or China were identified in a brief review of product
offerings on the Internet site in 2012.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
b. Market Disruption Related to Other CPSC Actions on Magnet Sets
CPSC Compliance staff contacted 13 magnet set importers for
corrective actions before the Commission published the NPR.\13\ At
staff's request in July 2012, 10 firms agreed to stop the manufacture,
importation, distribution, and sale of high-powered, manipulative
magnetic products of the types that would be subject to the rule. Three
other firms did not stop selling the products (although one of these
firms initially had agreed to cease sales voluntarily). The Commission
voted to initiate administrative actions seeking a determination that
certain magnet sets are a substantial product hazard, along with an
order requiring the firms that import these products cease sales and
offer refunds to customers.\14\ The three firms that have been subject
to the administrative complaints by the CPSC, and the 10 firms that
have agreed to stop sales voluntarily, accounted for virtually all
sales of the products during the period from 2009 to mid-2012.
Additionally, the largest importer of magnet sets subject to the rule
(one of the three firms sued in administrative complaints), Maxfield &
Oberton Holdings, LLC, announced that it ceased operations, effective
December 27, 2012. Another of the three firms sued in administrative
complaints, Star Networks USA, LLC, agreed to stop further sales of
magnet sets in July 2014, leaving just one major magnet set importer,
Zen Magnets, LLC. As a result of these actions and events, sales of the
subject magnet sets currently are dramatically lower than they were at
the time of the enforcement actions.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\13\ Although other importers were identified, these other
importers were believed to sell so few magnet sets that staff did
not have the resources to pursue these matters on a case-by-case
basis against all known importers. Thus, targeting for corrective
actions was limited to 13 firms believed to account for the largest
portion of the market.
\14\ For example, see the December 19, 2012, CPSC press release
related to the administrative complaint filed against Star Networks
(https://www.cpsc.gov/en/Newsroom/News-Releases/2013/CPSC-Sues-Star-Networks-USA-Over-Hazardous-High-Powered-Magnetic-Balls-and-Cubes/).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
3. Evaluation of the Rule
a. Societal Costs and the Potential Benefits
i. Estimated Societal Costs of Injuries
The purpose of the final rule is to prevent serious intestinal
injuries that can result when children ingest two or more of the
magnets from a subject magnet set (or one magnet and another metallic
object). The final rule would establish a standard for magnet sets and
individual magnets that are marketed or intended for use as parts of a
magnet set. Distributing magnet sets and individual magnets intended
for magnet sets that do not meet specified requirements would be
prohibited. Therefore, a reduction in injuries would be the resulting
benefit of the rule.
Baseline. Our analysis of the potential benefits of the rule
focuses on injuries reported through the National Electronic Injury
Surveillance System (NEISS), a probability sample of U.S. hospital
emergency departments that can be used to provide national estimates of
product-related injuries initially treated in U.S. hospital emergency
departments. The expected benefits of a product safety regulation must
be measured against a baseline representing the best assessment of how
the market would operate and how products would be used in the absence
of the intervention. In the case of the rule prohibiting the subject
magnet sets, the baseline would represent the time period before the
actions by which the CPSC: (1) Requested that importers and retailers
stop selling the magnet sets; (2) initiated administrative actions
against importers that refused to stop selling the magnet sets (each of
which seeks an order directing the importer to offer refunds in
exchange for the return of purchased magnet sets); (3) publicized
corrective actions, whereby certain importers and retailers of magnet
sets agreed to provide refunds to consumers in exchange for the return
of purchased magnet sets; and (4) issued warnings to the public
regarding the grave dangers that the subject magnet sets posed to
children. Because CPSC compliance actions have significantly altered
the state of the market, the environment before these actions occurred
represents the best approximation of how the market would have operated
in the absence of CPSC intervention and is the appropriate reference
baseline for evaluating the impact of the rule. Consequently, although
the Directorate for Epidemiology's hazard analysis described injuries
involving magnets that occurred from 2009 through December 2013
(Garland, 2014), our analysis will be limited to the period from 2009
through June 2012, before the request to stop sales, administrative
actions, recalls, and public warnings ensued.
Based on a review of incident narratives coded from emergency
department medical records for magnet ingestion cases obtained from
NEISS hospitals, the Directorate for Epidemiology staff has identified
86 ingestions of high-powered and/or ball-shaped magnets, which
occurred from 2009 through June 2012. These incidents were determined
to involve, or possibly involve, the magnets of interest. Although
manufacturer or brand name information is rarely available in the
medical records extracted for NEISS, nine of the 86 NEISS-reported
cases (10.5%) mentioned a brand name of magnet sets that are the
magnets of interest; 77 cases (89.5%) were determined possibly to have
involved the magnets of interest because the case narratives included
terms such as ``high powered,'' ``magnetic ball,'' ``magnetic marble,''
``BB size magnet,'' or ``magnetic beads'' (Garland, 2014).
Injuries and Societal Costs. Based on the 86 NEISS-reported magnet
cases, there were an estimated 2,138 injuries treated in U.S. hospital
emergency departments from 2009 through June 2012. About 11 percent of
these NEISS-reported cases were injuries requiring hospitalization, as
opposed to the 89 percent that were treated and released. The benefits
of the rule can be estimated as the reduction in the societal costs
associated with the injuries that would be prevented by the rule. The
[[Page 59979]]
Directorate for Economic Analysis bases estimates of the societal costs
of emergency department-treated magnet injuries on the CPSC's Injury
Cost Model (ICM) (Miller et al., 2000).
The ICM is fully integrated with NEISS and provides estimates of
the societal costs of injuries reported through NEISS. The major
aggregated components of the ICM include: medical costs; work losses;
and the intangible costs associated with lost quality of life or pain
and suffering.\15\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\15\ A detailed description of the cost components, and the
general methodology and data sources used to develop the CPSC's
Injury Cost Model, can be found in Miller et al. (2000).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Medical costs include three categories of expenditure: (1) Medical
and hospital costs associated with treating the injury victim during
the initial recovery period and in the long run, the costs associated
with corrective surgery, the treatment of chronic injuries, and
rehabilitation services; (2) ancillary costs, such as costs for
prescriptions, medical equipment, and ambulance transport; and (3)
costs of health insurance claims processing. Cost estimates for these
expenditure categories were derived from a number of national and state
databases, including the National Healthcare Cost and Utilization
Project--National Inpatient Sample and the Medical Expenditure Panel
Survey, both sponsored by the Agency for Healthcare Research and
Quality.
Work loss estimates, based on information from the National Health
Interview Survey and the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics, as well as a
number of published wage studies, include: (1) The forgone earnings of
parents and visitors, including lost wage work and household work, (2)
imputed long term work losses of the victim that would be associated
with permanent impairment, and (3) employer productivity losses, such
as the costs incurred when employers spend time juggling schedules or
training replacement workers. The earnings estimates were updated most
recently with weekly earnings data from the Current Population Survey
conducted by the Bureau of the Census in conjunction with the Bureau of
Labor Statistics.
Intangible, or non-economic, costs of injury reflect the physical
and emotional trauma of injury as well as the mental anguish of victims
and caregivers. Intangible costs are difficult to quantify because they
do not represent products or resources traded in the marketplace.
Nevertheless, they typically represent the largest component of injury
cost and need to be accounted for in any benefit-cost analysis
involving health outcomes (Rice et al., 1989). The Injury Cost Model
develops a monetary estimate of these intangible costs from jury awards
for pain and suffering. While these awards can vary widely on a case-
by-case basis, studies have shown them to be systematically related to
a number of factors, including economic losses, the type and severity
of injury, and the age of the victim (Viscusi, 1988; Rodgers, 1993).
Estimates for the Injury Cost Model were derived from a regression
analysis of about 2,000 jury awards in nonfatal product liability cases
involving consumer products compiled by Jury Verdicts Research, Inc.
In addition to estimating the costs of injuries treated in U.S.
hospital emergency departments and reported through NEISS, the Injury
Cost Model uses empirical relationships between emergency department
injuries and those treated in other settings (e.g., physicians'
offices, clinics, ambulatory surgery centers, and direct hospital
admissions) to estimate the number, types, and costs of injuries
treated outside of hospital emergency departments (Miller et al., 2000;
Lawrence, 2013). Thus, the Injury Cost Model allows us to expand on
NEISS by combining (1) the number and costs of emergency department
injuries with (2) the number and costs of medically attended injuries
treated in other settings to estimate the total number of medically
attended injuries and their costs across all treatment levels.
Table 1 below provides annual estimates of the injuries and the
societal costs associated with ``high-powered and/or ball-shaped magnet
ingestions'' that involve, or possibly involve, the magnets that are
the subject of the rule. As shown in Table 1, the 2009 through June
2012 NEISS estimates suggest an estimated annual average of about 610
emergency department-treated injuries, including 544 injuries that were
treated and released and 66 injuries that required hospitalization.
About 60 percent of these emergency department-treated ingestions
involved children ages 4 through 12 years. Just over half of the magnet
cases from the emergency departments of the hospitals that comprise the
NEISS sample appear to have involved the ingestion of more than one
magnet. Additionally, based on estimates from the ICM, there were
another 319 injuries treated annually in locations other than hospital
emergency departments.\16\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\16\ Although no deaths were reported during the baseline time
period for this analysis, one death involving the subject magnets
was reported in 2013.
Table 1--Estimated Average Annual Medically Attended Injuries and
Associated Societal Costs for High-Powered and/or Ball-Shaped Magnet
Ingestions That Were Determined To Involve, or Possibly Involve, the
Magnets of Interest, 2009-June 2012
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Estimated
Injury disposition Estimated societal costs
number ($ millions) *
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Treated and Released from Hospital 544 11.4
Emergency Department (NEISS)...........
Admitted to Hospital Through the [dagger] 66 8.6
Emergency Department (NEISS)...........
-------------------------------
Medically Treated Outside of 319 8.6
Hospital Emergency Department (ICM)
Total Medically Attended Injuries....... 929 28.6
------------------------------------------------------------------------
* In 2012 dollars.
[dagger] According to the Directorate for Epidemiology, the estimated
number of hospital-admitted, emergency department-treated injuries is
a not a reliable estimate because of the small number of cases upon
which the estimate was based.
After including the injuries treated outside of hospital emergency
departments, there was an estimated annual average of about 929
medically attended injuries involving ingestions of the magnets of
interest. Based on the ICM, these injuries resulted in annual societal
costs of about $28.6 million (in 2012 dollars) during the 2009 to June
2012 time period. The injury cost estimates differ from those presented
in the preliminary regulatory analysis
[[Page 59980]]
because of an expansion of the baseline time period from 2009 through
2011 to 2009 through June 2012 and because of updates to the CPSC's
Injury Cost Model (Lawrence, 2013). The injury cost estimates were also
inflated from 2011 to 2012 dollars.
The average estimated societal costs per injury was about $27,000
for injuries treated in locations other than emergency departments
(such as physicians' offices, clinics, ambulatory surgery centers, or
direct hospital admissions); about $21,000 for injuries that were
treated and released from emergency departments; and about $130,000 for
injuries that required admission to the hospital for treatment. Medical
costs and work losses (including work losses of caregivers) accounted
for about 30 percent of these injury cost estimates, and the less
tangible costs of injury associated with pain and suffering accounted
for about 70 percent of the estimated injury costs.
Uncertainty. As noted in the preliminary regulatory analysis, there
is uncertainty concerning these estimates. Some of the cases described
as involving the magnets of interest that were included in Table 1 may
not have involved the magnets that are the subject of the rule. As
noted above, about 90 percent of the cases upon which the table was
based were described as only possibly involving the magnets of interest
because NEISS narratives are not required to list manufacturer or brand
name. Hence, it is possible that Table 1 overstates the societal costs
associated with the magnets that would be included in the rule.
On the other hand, in addition to the magnet cases upon which the
table was based, there were also 230 NEISS cases (representing about
1,526 emergency department-treated injuries annually), in which the
magnet type was classified as ``unknown or other.'' These cases
included narratives that mentioned that a magnet was involved but
presented insufficient information to classify the magnet type.
Consequently, to the extent that the unknown magnet types involved
magnets that would be covered by the rule, the Table 1 results would
tend to understate the societal costs associated with the magnets
subject to the rule.
ii. Estimated Benefits of the Rule
As noted above, the benefits of the magnet rule would be the
reduction in the societal costs of the injuries that would be
prevented. Because the rule will eliminate from the market all magnet
sets involved in the ingestion injuries described above, all injuries
that would have occurred in the absence of a rule would be prevented.
Although no deaths involving magnet sets occurred during the time
period covered by our analysis, we know of a magnet set related
fatality that occurred in 2013. Thus, we anticipate that the rule would
prevent future fatalities as well as injuries. However, if children,
adolescents, and teens cannot play with or use the prohibited magnets,
they could play with or use substitute products (including high-powered
magnets intended for other uses \17\) that also may result in injury.
Hence, the overall benefits of the rule should be measured as the net
reduction in injuries and the concomitant reduction in societal costs
that would result. Based on the injury estimates presented in Table 1,
and given the absence of information on expected use and risks of
alternative products or activities, the expected benefits of the rule
might amount to about $28.6 million annually.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\17\ Common commercial and industrial applications of small
neodymium-iron-boron magnets include their use in holding systems,
motors (DC, servo, linear, and voice coil), magnetic bearings,
magnetic couplings, jewelry, welding clamps, oil filters, disc
drives, loudspeakers, headphones, microphones, instrumentation,
switches, and relays.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
b. Potential Costs of the Rule
Both consumers and producers benefit from the production and sale
of consumer products. The consuming public obtains the use value or
``utility'' associated with the consumption of products; producers
obtain income and profits from the production and sale of products.
Consequently, the costs of a rule that eliminates certain magnetic sets
would consist of: (1) The lost use value experienced by consumers who
would no longer be able to purchase magnets that do not meet the
standard at any price; and (2) the lost income and profits to firms
that could not produce and sell non-complying products in the future.
The same baseline used in the benefits assessment, 2009 to June 2012,
is used for the cost analysis.
i. Lost Utility to Consumers
First, consider the lost utility to consumers. We cannot estimate
in any precise way the use value that consumers receive from these
products, but we can describe use value conceptually. In general, use
value includes the amount of: (1) Consumer expenditures for the
product, plus (2) what is called ``consumer surplus.'' In the case of
the magnet sets, given sales of about 800,000 sets annually during the
2009 to June 2012 time period, and assuming an average retail price of
about $25 in 2012, consumer expenditures would amount to about $20
million annually in 2012 dollars. These expenditures represent the
minimum value that consumers would expect to get from these products.
It is represented by the area of the rectangle OBDE in the standard
supply and demand graph below, where B equals $25, and E equals 800,000
units.
[[Page 59981]]
[GRAPHIC] [TIFF OMITTED] TR03OC14.003
The consumer surplus is given by the area of the triangle BCD under
the graph's demand function and represents the difference between the
market clearing price and the maximum amount consumers would have been
willing to pay for the product. This consumer surplus will vary for
individual consumers, but it represents a benefit to consumers over and
above what they had to pay (McCloskey, 1982).\18\ For example, although
tickets to a concert or football game might sell for $100 each, some
consumers who buy them for $100 would have been willing to pay $150 per
ticket. In other words, they paid $100 and received benefits that they
value at $150. Hence, each of these consumers would receive a consumer
surplus of $50.\19\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\18\ The concept of consumer surplus is discussed in OMB's
Circular A-4 (OMB, 2003) and has been applied in several CPSC staff
analyses, including Tohamy (2006) and Rodgers (2004).
\19\ If the above graph represents the market for tickets, the
demand curve describes the quantity of tickets demanded at each
price (i.e., the quantity of tickets consumers are willing and able
to purchase at each price). In this example, the $150 that the
consumer would have been willing to pay for the ticket is
represented on the demand curve at a point to the left of point D.
The consumer surplus is given by the relevant point on the demand
curve (i.e., where price = $150), minus the market clearing price of
$100.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
In general, the use value of the magnet sets obtained by consumers
is represented by the area of the trapezoid OCDE. However, the
prospective loss in use value associated with the rule, which would
prohibit certain magnet sets that do not comply with the rule, would
amount to, at most, the area of the triangle representing the consumer
surplus. This is because consumers would no longer be able to obtain
utility from the prohibited product, but they would, nevertheless,
still have the $20 million (represented by the rectangle OBDE) that
they would have spent on magnet sets in the absence of a rule. Although
consumers would no longer be able to purchase magnet sets, which would
have been their first choice, they can use this money to buy other
products providing use value.
We have no information regarding aggregate consumer surplus; and
hence, no information on the amount of utility that would be lost from
a magnet set rule. Although the magnet sets clearly provide ``utility''
to purchasers, magnet sets are not necessities. Consequently, the
demand for magnet sets is probably not price inelastic, a factor that
would tend to reduce estimates of utility losses.\20\ Additionally, if
the magnetic sets are ``faddish,'' they may not be the type of product
that will be used intensely by consumers over long periods of time.
However, if, for example, consumers who purchased the magnetic sets at
an average price of $25 would have been willing to spend, on average,
$35 per set, the lost utility from the magnet sets might amount to
about $8 million on an annual basis (i.e., [$35-$25] x 800,000 units
annually).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\20\ To say that the demand for a product is price ``inelastic''
means that the quantity demanded tends to be insensitive to changes
in the price of the product. Gasoline is an example of a product
with an inelastic demand. Consumers are not likely to reduce
substantially their purchase of gasoline (at least in the short
run), even if the price increases substantially.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Finally, we note that the loss in consumer surplus just described
represents the maximum loss of consumer utility from the rule; the
actual loss is likely to be lower. This is because consumers are likely
to gain some amount of consumer surplus from products that are
purchased as an alternative to those magnet sets that would no longer
be available because of the rule. If, for example, there were close
substitutes for the magnet sets that do not meet the standard (e.g.,
desk toys that are almost as satisfying and similarly priced), the
overall loss in consumer surplus (and, hence, the costs of the rule)
would probably tend to be small. On the other hand, if there are no
close substitutes, the costs of the rule would tend to be higher.
[[Page 59982]]
Some alternative products might serve some of the same uses of the
subject magnet sets. For example, consider the Liberty Balls mentioned
earlier, which are comprised of large (1.3 inch) ferrite magnetic
objects. Their size, weight, and relatively high price per ball make
Liberty Balls unsuitable and impractical for use in most sculpturing
and other construction activities for which the subject magnet sets are
used. They might still be used by some for ``fidgeting,'' but there
does not seem to be any unique attribute of this product that would
cause a consumer to purchase Liberty Balls specifically for fidgeting;
common objects, such as paper clips or ball bearings, could serve the
same fidgeting purpose at a lower price.
Another possible alternative product discussed by the Directorate
for Engineering Sciences (Amodeo, 2013) could be magnet sets comprised
of individual magnets permanently connected by rods or other means,
such that the resulting magnetic objects are not small parts. Such sets
are marketed as children's toys because the individual pieces in the
set do not fit into the small parts cylinder. Although these products
have not been marketed for adults, and we have no evidence that they
could be considered a good substitute for the subject magnet sets, if
such sets could satisfy some consumers' needs in constructing geometric
shapes, then the lost consumer surplus might be reduced.
Notwithstanding the availability of alternatives to the subject
magnet sets, the rule will still result in some level of lost utility.
By purchasing the products in question, rather than other products,
consumers are revealing that they have a preference for the subject
magnet sets that they believe are likely to provide them more utility
than a substitute purchase.
ii. Lost Benefits to Producers
The lost benefits to firms resulting from a rule that effectively
eliminates a product they produce are measured by a loss in what is
called producer surplus. Producer surplus is a profit measure that is
somewhat analogous to consumer surplus. Whereas consumer surplus is a
measure of benefits received by individuals who consume products, net
of the cost of purchasing the products, producer surplus is a measure
of the benefits accruing to firms that produce and sell products, net
of the costs of producing them. More formally, ``producer surplus'' is
defined as the total revenue (TR) of firms selling the magnet sets,
less the total variable costs (TVC) of production. Variable costs are
costs that vary with the level of output and usually include
expenditures for raw materials, wages, distribution of the product, and
the like.\21\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\21\ Note that although producer surplus (PS) is a measure of
profits, it is not the same as profits. Whereas PS = TR-TVC, profits
([pi]) = TR-(TFC + TVC), where TFC represents total fixed costs
(i.e., those costs borne by the firm regardless of the level of
output). If we substitute PS into the profit equation, and rearrange
terms, we have PS = [pi] + TFC. Thus, producer surplus is equal to
profits, plus total fixed costs. In the case of the market for
magnet sets, the fixed costs of production for American importers
are small. The magnet sets were generally produced, packaged, and
shipped from China and sometimes sent directly to the importer's
point of sale. Even when the magnet sets were shipped directly to
importers, most additional costs incurred by importers, such as
shipping and marketing costs, would be considered variable.
Consequently, in the case of the market for magnet sets, lost
profits would be approximately equal to lost producer surplus.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
In Figure 1, total revenue is given by the area OBDE, which is
simply the product of sales and price. The total variable costs of
production are given by the area under the supply function, OADE.
Consequently, producer surplus is given by the triangle, ABD, which is
the area under the market clearing price and above the supply function.
As described earlier, sales of the magnet sets averaged roughly
800,000 sets annually during the 2009 through mid-2012 time period,
with an average retail price of about $25 per set in 2012. Thus, total
industry revenues averaged about $20 million annually (i.e., 800,000
sets x $25 per set) in 2012 dollars. Additional information provided by
firms to the Office of Compliance and Field Operations suggests that
the average import cost of the magnets to U.S. importers, a major
variable cost, may have amounted to about $10 per set, or an average of
about $8 million annually (i.e., 800,000 sets x $10 import cost per
set). We have no information on other variable costs associated with
the production, packaging, marketing, and distribution of the magnet
sets. However, it seems likely that variable costs would constitute a
significant proportion of the remaining difference between revenues
($20 million) and import costs ($8 million). If we assume that variable
costs amount to about half of the difference, lost producer surplus
would amount to about $6 million.\22\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\22\ This value is lower than the value presented in the
preliminary regulatory analysis, due to the use of more refined
sales figures for the affected producers.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
iii. Summary of Costs of the Rule
The costs of the rule, in terms of reduced benefits for firms and
lost utility by consumers, are uncertain. However, based on annual
sales estimates available for 2009 through mid-2012, these costs could
amount to as much as $6 million in lost producer surplus and some
unknown quantity of lost utility. The estimate of lost producer surplus
differs from impacts estimated in the NPR (7.5 million, expressed as
lost profits) because of a revised estimate of annual sales, and
different assumptions regarding profit rates and variable costs.
c. Sensitivity of Results to Product Life Assumptions
Implicit in this analysis is the assumption that the expected
useful life of the magnet sets is about 1 year. Because this product
has only been in widespread consumer use since 2009, this assumption is
made without extensive knowledge about the actual use of the magnetic
sets by consumers. We consider magnet sets to be novelty products,
which means for many consumers, they may lose much of their appeal
quite quickly. Accordingly, we chose a one-year rather than a longer
useful life even though the magnets may be physically durable products.
Even if some of the products remain in homes or offices longer than a
year, the risk of ingestion by children may be much higher in the first
month or two after the magnet sets are purchased, when the appeal of
the product is at its highest and the consumer actively uses or plays
with the product frequently. Once novelty products lose their appeal,
they are likely to be put away and stored indefinitely or perhaps even
discarded.
However, we note that the results of our analysis are not
particularly sensitive to this product life assumption. For example,
had we assumed that the average product life was about 2 years, rather
than 1 year, estimates of the number of sets in use at any given time
would approximately double, reducing the estimated annual risk of
injury, per magnet set in use (and hence, reduce estimated societal
costs per set), by about half. However, this reduced estimate of annual
societal costs would be offset by the fact that the sets remain in use
for 2 years, rather than 1 year. Thus, annual benefits, per magnet set
in use, would be about halved, but the present value of benefits would
be accrued over 2 years, rather than 1 year. Consequently, even if we
had doubled the assumed product life, the relationship between benefits
and costs would have remained roughly the same. Estimated benefits
would be slightly lower under a two year useful product life due to
discounting second year benefits.
[[Page 59983]]
d. Alternatives to the Rule
There are several possible alternatives to the rule. We are unable
to quantify either the costs or the benefits of these alternatives, in
part because the requirements of such alternatives have not been
specified. To estimate the potential costs of the alternatives, we
would need a precise description of what the requirements would be.
Moreover, even with this information, it would still be difficult to
determine the expected injury reduction from the various alternatives.
Nevertheless, the costs of each of the alternatives discussed below
are expected to be substantially lower than the costs of the rule. This
is because, generally speaking, the alternatives would allow consumers
and businesses to continue buying, selling, and using the magnet sets
that would no longer be available under the rule. Similarly, the
benefits of these alternatives, in terms of injury reduction, would
also be expected to be lower than the benefits for the rule. This is
because, under these alternatives, some children would continue to have
access to the magnet sets.
The Commission may not have authority for some of the alternatives
discussed. None of the alternatives was chosen because the expected
injury reduction from each was believed to address the hazard
inadequately. Comments on the NPR did not alter this decision.
i. Alternative Performance Requirements
As an alternative to the rule, the Commission could consider
promulgating an alternative set of requirements that could reduce the
risk of injury from magnet sets but not necessarily eliminate the risk.
For example, some alternatives to the rule might include: Setting a
different flux index for the magnets sold as manipulative desk sets;
requiring different specifications for shapes and sizes of magnets
within the scope of the standard; or setting forth some other criteria
that have not yet been developed (but are not as stringent as in the
final rule). If these alternative requirements led to the production of
magnet sets with physical characteristics that appealed to consumers,
the cost of the rule for both consumers and businesses would be
reduced. Businesses would continue to be able to produce and sell
magnet sets, and consumers would continue to be able to buy and use
them. However, these alternative requirements would likely reduce the
benefits of a rule: Magnets that present a risk of harm would still be
available and some children would undoubtedly have access to them and
be injured by them.
One practical question, however, is whether alternative
requirements for the sizes and flux index of magnets would eliminate or
substantially affect the physical qualities of the products that make
them enjoyable for adults. Regarding the alternative size requirements,
consumers can use magnet sets of 216 or more 5mm balls to make a
variety of constructions. Larger individual magnets that would meet an
alternative (that is smaller than the 1.25-inch diameter specified in
the final rule) might be determined to reduce the risk associated with
ingestions somewhat, but, depending upon their size, might make them
unsuitable for many of the uses of the sets with smaller magnets.
Similarly, allowing a flux index greater than the 50 kG\2\ mm\2\
flux limit of the rule might improve the usefulness of the magnet sets
in construction activities. However, given that the subject magnet sets
have flux index values typically in the range of 400-500 for spherical
magnets, the flux index limit might have to be increased substantially
higher than the flux index limit of 50 kG\2\ mm\2\ to provide levels of
satisfaction that are similar to those of the subject magnet sets.
Moreover, a flux index limit of substantially more than 50 kG\2\ mm\2\
could, relative to the proposed rule, substantially increase the harms
associated with the ingestion risk--the harms the rule is intended to
prevent.
Another alternative might be to create specifications for the
application of bittering agents on the magnets to make them less
appealing to young children. However, the effectiveness of bittering
agents in reducing magnet ingestions is questionable (Sedney & Smith,
2012).
Neither the costs, nor the benefits of these alternative sets of
requirements are quantifiable with available information. The staff is
reasonably certain that magnets with a flux index of less than 50 kG\2\
mm\2\ will substantially reduce the risk injury. However, the risk
associated with flux indices greater than 50 kG\2\ mm\2\ but less than
the indices of 400 to 500 for the subject magnet sets are unknown and
cannot be estimated with available data. The staff is also reasonably
certain that the risk of ingesting magnets is substantially reduced if
the magnets are too large for the small parts container. However, the
increased risk of ingestion with smaller sized magnets is unknown.
Require Safer Packaging
The Commission could require magnet sets to be sold with special
storage containers that are fitted to the product so that consumers
would be able to determine whether any of the magnets were missing from
the sets. Such a requirement might prevent injuries resulting from a
small number of magnets being separated from a set without the owner
being aware. In reality, however, many consumers may not use such
containers because using them could require time to form the magnets
into a shape, such as a cube; or consumers might wish to keep the
magnets out of their container to preserve a shape or structure that
took time and effort to construct.
Alternatively (or in combination), the Commission could require the
magnets to be sold in child-resistant packaging. The benefit of such an
approach is the potential to reduce ingestion injuries. However, the
benefits of this approach would be limited. Child-resistant packaging
would not prevent teens and adolescents (and even some younger
children) from opening the packaging. Additionally, the packaging would
have to be secured after each use. According to the Division of Human
Factors, it is unlikely that adults would accept child-resistant
packaging for a product like the magnet sets because of the level of
inconvenience involved in returning the magnets to the package (Sedney
& Smith, 2012). Additionally, for the reasons described above,
consumers may leave magnets out of their container.
The costs of this alternative would depend upon the packaging
requirements but would be substantially less costly than the rule,
which eliminates the subject magnet sets from the marketplace. It seems
unlikely that the costs would amount to more than a dollar or so per
magnet set, although these costs might be somewhat higher if child-
resistant packaging was required. The benefits of requiring safer
packaging are unknown, but based on the HF discussion above, the
benefits may be relatively small if consumers would not use the
packaging containers appropriately.
ii. Warnings
The Commission could require strong warnings on labels and on-
product instructions designed to prevent the use of the magnet sets by
children. Based on HF staff's examination, the ingestion warnings that
currently accompany magnet sets are generally aimed at adults, but the
warnings are deficient in their content. For example, some
[[Page 59984]]
warnings caution against children swallowing the magnets, but the
warnings do not describe the incident scenarios. Some warnings refer to
the propensity of swallowed magnets to stick to intestines, without
referring to the presence of other magnets or metal objects. Other
warnings refer to magnets sticking together or attaching to other
metallic objects inside the body, but the warnings do not explain that
the magnets can attract through the walls of the intestines and
forcefully compress these tissues, resulting in serious injuries.
According to HF staff, without detailed information in the warnings,
consumers may not really understand how swallowing magnets differs from
swallowing other small parts or how magnets sticking together could
pose a hazard.
HF staff believes that it may be possible to develop warnings that
could communicate the ingestion hazard, the consequences of ingestion,
and how to avoid the hazard. To the extent that the subject magnets
present a ``hidden'' hazard about which consumers are unaware, explicit
and adequate warnings could reduce ingestions and allow adults to
continue to enjoy the use of the product.
The costs of such warnings would most likely be small, and
consumers could make informed decisions about the purchase and use of
magnet sets. However, although HF staff believes warnings could be
developed to communicate the hazard, HF staff also believes that injury
reduction would be limited. They point out that avoiding the ingestion
hazard requires consumers to keep the product away from all children in
the incident age group, and while caregivers who read and understand
the warnings may attempt to keep this product out of the hands of young
children, HF staff doubts that many caregivers are likely to be so
diligent about heeding the warning with older children and adolescents
(Sedney & Smith, 2012). Also, HF staff doubts that caregivers will
think that constant supervision is needed if they believe the sets have
been properly secured or that their children are not aware of the sets
(Sedney & Smith, 2013). As noted in the NPR (77 FR 53781), a corrective
action in 2010, which included stronger warnings combined with
provisions for controlling distribution of magnet sets, was found to be
inadequate because of a subsequent increase in ingestion injuries
involving the products. Consequently, warnings (combined with sales
restrictions and other measures) have not been judged to address the
risk posed by the subject magnet sets adequately.
iv. Restrictions on the Sale of Magnet Sets
Another lower-cost option the Commission could consider is to
prohibit sales of magnet sets in toy stores, children's sections of
general purpose stores, and near cash registers of stores that sell any
children's products. The costs of this option would be lower than the
rule because this would allow the magnet sets to be marketed to and
used by consumers. Sales limitations or requirements for strong
warnings might also be required on Web sites advertising the sale of
magnets on the Internet.
The details of developing a set of sales limitations and
requirements would need to be worked out, but the idea would be to make
sure that magnet sets, to the extent possible, are not sold at
locations where children are likely to be present. Sales requirements
might also be combined with strong and explicit warnings that HF staff
has suggested could be developed.
However, the benefits of this option are probably limited. Some
parents would still allow their children (especially older children and
adolescents) to play with the magnet sets, despite the warnings.\23\ In
addition, some children will get into the packaging, even if parents
try to restrict the use of the desk toys.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\23\ As noted in the NPR (77 FR 53781), one firm agreed to a
corrective action in 2010, which included provisions for controlling
distribution by agreeing to ask retailers who market products
primarily to children to execute a Responsible Sellers Agreement
prohibiting marketing and sales to children, as well as agreeing to
stop the sale of magnet sets to retailers who market products
exclusively to children. However, with a subsequent increase in
ingestion injuries involving the products, Compliance began
negotiation of corrective action plans with 11 of 13 magnet set
importers that voluntarily agreed to cease the importation,
distribution, and continued sale of their magnet sets, and
administrative actions were initiated by the Commission against two
firms that did not agree to cease sales voluntarily. By implication,
sales restrictions (combined with warnings and other measures) have
not been judged to address the risk posed by the subject magnet sets
adequately.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
v. Address Through Corrective Actions Rather Than Regulatory Action
The Commission could continue to address the hazard through
corrective action plans. However, this approach may be inadequate
because this approach is reactive and would entail waiting for new
incidents to occur rather than preventing them.
vi. Take No Action
The Commission could determine that no rule is reasonably necessary
to reduce the risk of ingestion injuries associated with small,
powerful magnet sets. Under this alternative, future societal losses
would be determined by the numbers of products in use, and other
factors that affect the likelihood that young children, adolescents,
and teens will ingest the magnets. Although there would be no costs,
such a determination would not reduce injuries.
4. Summary
Based on reports to the CPSC, ingestions of small magnets contained
in certain magnet sets have caused multiple, high-severity injuries
that require surgery to remove the magnets and repair internal damage.
Based on the NEISS cases identified by the Directorate for Epidemiology
staff as involving high-powered and/or ball-shaped magnet ingestions,
the estimated benefits of the rule might amount to about $28.6 million
annually.
The costs of the rule consist of the reduced producer surplus for
firms and lost utility by consumers, also are uncertain. Based on
annual sales estimates available for 2009 through mid-2012, these costs
could amount to as much as $6 million in lost producer surplus and some
unknown quantity of lost utility.
There are alternative regulatory actions that might allow the
magnet sets to continue to be marketed. For example, the Commission, by
regulation, could issue alternative requirements; issue requirements
for the packaging of the magnet sets (e.g., develop requirements for
child-resistant packaging); require warnings that describe explicitly
the hazard and how to avoid it; and/or place limitations on how and
where the magnet sets can be sold. These alternative actions--which
might be considered alone, or in combination--would have varying levels
of effectiveness, but all of them would be result in lower reductions
in injuries associated with magnet ingestion.
I. Paperwork Reduction Act
The rule does not require manufacturers (including importers) to
perform testing or require manufacturers or retailers to keep records.
For this reason, the rule does not contain ``collection of information
requirements,'' as that term is used in the Paperwork Reduction Act, 44
U.S.C. 3501-3520. Therefore, the rule need not be submitted to the
Office of Management and Budget (OMB) in accordance with 44 U.S.C.
3507(d) and implementing regulations codified at 5 CFR 1320.11.
[[Page 59985]]
J. Regulatory Flexibility Analysis
1. Introduction
The Regulatory Flexibility Act (RFA) requires that agencies review
rules for their potential economic impact on small entities, including
small businesses. Section 604 of the RFA calls for agencies to prepare
a final regulatory flexibility analysis, describing the impact of the
rule on small entities and identifying impact-reducing alternatives.
The final regulatory flexibility analysis is to contain:
(1) A statement of the need for, and objectives of, the rule;
(2) a statement of the significant issues raised by the public
comments in response to the initial regulatory flexibility analysis, a
statement of the agency's assessment of those issues, and a statement
of any changes made to the proposed rule as a result of such comments;
(3) the response of the agency to any comments filed by the Chief
Counsel for Advocacy of the Small Business Administration in response
to the proposed rule, and a statement of any changes made in the final
rule as a result of the comments;
(4) a description of, and where feasible, an estimate of the number
of small entities to which the proposed rule will apply;
(5) a description of the projected reporting, recordkeeping, and
other compliance requirements of the proposed rule, including an
estimate of the classes of small entities that will be subject to the
requirement and the types of professional skills necessary for the
preparation of the report or record; and
(6) a description of the steps the agency has taken to minimize the
significant economic impact on small entities consistent with the
stated objectives of applicable statutes, including a statement of the
factual, policy, and legal reasons for selecting the alternative
adopted in the final rule and why each one of the other alternatives to
the rule considered by the agency which affect the impact on small
entities was rejected.
Accordingly, staff prepared a final regulatory flexibility analysis,
which is summarized below.
2. Statement of the Need for, and Objectives of, the Rule
The rule prohibits the sale or distribution in commerce of magnet
sets and individual magnets intended to be used with or as magnet sets
that do not meet the specific requirements described in section F of
this preamble. The current designs of magnet sets of the type that
became popular in recent years would not meet the rule's requirements.
The CPSC has received information, described in section C of this
preamble, regarding incidents with, and hazards posed by, sets of
small, powerful magnets. According to the final regulatory analysis,
there was an annual average of about 929 medically attended magnet
ingestions that were defined as at least ``possibly of interest''
during the period from 2009 through June 2012. These ingestions
resulted in societal costs of about $28.6 million per year.
The objective of the rule is to eliminate or reduce the risk of
injury to consumers from the ingestion of one or more small powerful
magnets that comprise the subject consumer products. Because the magnet
sets that have been involved in incidents would not meet the rule's
requirements, the rule will substantially reduce the future incidence
and cost to society of ingestions of magnet sets.
3. Comments on the Initial Regulatory Flexibility Analysis
The Commission received comments from more than 5,000 people in
response to the NPR. Many of the comments related to issues that have a
bearing on the economic impacts of the proposed rule on small
businesses. The Commission's responses to comments that address issues
that were mentioned in the initial regulatory flexibility analysis
(IRFA) are in included in Section E of this notice.
4. Small Entities Subject to the Rule and Possible Economic Impacts
The final rule would impact U.S. importers and retailers of magnet
sets comprised of small, powerful magnets of the size and magnetic
force proscribed by the rule. None of the magnet sets within the scope
of the rule is produced domestically. All of the U.S. firms that have
marketed the products are believed to have imported them from
manufacturers in China. The one remaining firm that currently imports
magnet sets is a small business under U.S. Small Business
Administration (SBA) size standards (SBA, 2012).
Based on information reviewed on product sales, including reports
by firms to the Office of Compliance and Field Operations, the number
of such magnet sets that were sold to U.S. consumers from 2009 through
mid-2012 may have totaled about 2.7 million sets, with a value of
roughly $50 million in 2012 dollars. This value reflects a combination
of retail sales directly to consumers (through company Web sites and
other Internet retail sites) and sales to retailers who market the
products. A review of retail prices reported by importers and observed
on Internet sites suggests prices typically ranged from about $20 to
$45, with an average price of about $25 for magnet sets that commonly
contain 216 to 224 magnets. Larger sets of more than 1,000 individual
magnets have reportedly been sold at prices up to $300, depending on
the number of magnets and the type of packaging.
We noted in the IRFA that the economic impact of the rule would be
most severe for seven small importing firms, which account for the
great majority (perhaps more than 98%) of units sold according to sales
information provided to CPSC Compliance staff; and five of these
importers reportedly derived most or all of their revenues from the
sale of the magnet sets or related products. We judged that these firms
could go out of business as a result of the rule. Two of the other
leading importers of magnet sets apparently had fairly broad product
offerings, which could lessen the severity of the economic impact of a
rule. Nevertheless, we noted that the expected impacts of a final rule
could also be significant for these small importers.
As discussed in section H.2.b. of this preamble, due to CPSC's
enforcement actions, current sales of magnet sets are dramatically
smaller than at the time of the enforcement actions. We are aware of
only one major importer of magnet sets that remains active in the
market. The rule will likely have an adverse impact on this remaining
firm. That firm might go out of business, unless the firm successfully
markets other products, including magnet sets that would comply.
5. Projected Reporting, Recordkeeping, and Other Compliance
Requirements of the Rule
The rule does not contain any reporting or record keeping
requirements.
6. Alternatives to the Rule
The Commission could pursue other options, including: Adopting an
alternative set of requirements for the flux index or size of the
magnets; requiring safer packaging; requiring warnings on the packaging
and promotional materials; imposing restrictions on the locations where
magnet sets can be sold; addressing the risk of injury presented by
magnet sets through corrective actions; and taking no action at all.
Each of these alternatives is addressed in Section G of this preamble
and in the Final
[[Page 59986]]
Regulatory Analysis at Section H of this preamble. All of these
alternatives would reduce the expected impact of the rule on small
business. However, as discussed in Sections G and H of this preamble,
these alternatives would not be expected to achieve the same injury
reductions as the rule, and some of the suggested alternatives would be
beyond the Commission's authority.
K. Environmental Considerations
CPSC rules establishing performance requirements are considered to
``have little or no potential for affecting the human environment,''
and environmental assessments are not usually prepared for these rules
(16 CFR 1021.5 (c)(1)). This rule falls within the categorical
exemption.
L. Executive Order 12988 (Preemption)
As required by Executive Order 12988 (February 5, 1996), the CPSC
states the preemptive effect of the rule as follows:
The rule is promulgated under authority of the CPSA. 15 U.S.C.
2051-2089. Section 26 of the CPSA provides that ``whenever a consumer
product safety standard under this Act is in effect and applies to a
risk of injury associated with a consumer product, no State or
political subdivision of a State shall have any authority either to
establish or to continue in effect any provision of a safety standard
or regulation which prescribes any requirements as the performance,
composition, contents, design, finish, construction, packaging or
labeling of such product which are designed to deal with the same risk
of injury associated with such consumer product, unless such
requirements are identical to the requirements of the Federal
Standard.'' 15 U.S.C. 2075(a). Upon application to the Commission, a
state or local standard may be excepted from this preemptive effect, if
the state or local standard: (1) Provides a higher degree of protection
from the risk of injury or illness than the CPSA standard, and (2) does
not unduly burden interstate commerce. In addition, the federal
government, or a state or local government, may establish and continue
in effect a nonidentical requirement that provides a higher degree of
protection than the CPSA requirement for the hazardous substance for
the federal, state, or local government's use. 15 U.S.C. 2075(b).
Thus, with the exceptions noted above, the magnet set requirements
would preempt nonidentical state or local requirements for magnet sets
designed to protect against the same risk of injury.
M. Effective Date
The Commission has determined that the rule will become effective
180 days from publication of the final rule in the Federal Register and
will apply to all magnet sets imported into or otherwise distributed in
the United States that are manufactured or imported on or after that
date. The CPSA requires that consumer product safety rules take effect
not later than 180 days from their promulgation, unless the Commission
finds there is good cause for a later date. 15 U.S.C. 2058(g)(1). In
the NPR, the Commission proposed that the rule would take effect 180
days after promulgation of a final rule. The Commission received no
comments on the proposed effective date.
N. Findings
The CPSA requires the Commission to make certain findings when
issuing a consumer product safety standard. Specifically, the CPSA
requires that the Commission consider and make findings about the
degree and nature of the risk of injury; the number of consumer
products subject to the rule; the need of the public for the rule and
the probable effect on utility, cost, and availability of the product;
and other means to achieve the objective of the rule, while minimizing
the impact on competition, manufacturing, and commercial practices. The
CPSA also requires the rule to be reasonably necessary to eliminate or
reduce an unreasonable risk of injury associated with the product; and
issuing the rule must be in the public interest. 15 U.S.C. 2058(f)(3).
In addition, the Commission must find that: (1) If an applicable
voluntary standard has been adopted and implemented, that compliance
with the voluntary standard is not likely to adequately reduce the risk
of injury, or compliance with the voluntary standard is not likely to
be substantial; (2) that benefits expected from the regulation bear a
reasonable relationship to the regulation's costs; and (3) that the
regulation imposes the least burdensome requirement that would prevent
or adequately reduce the risk of injury. Id. These findings are stated
in Sec. 1240.5 of the rule and are based on information provided
throughout this preamble and the staff's briefing packages for the
proposed and final rules.
O. Conclusion
For the reasons stated in this preamble, the Commission concludes
that magnet sets and individual magnets that do not meet the
requirements specified in this rule present an unreasonable risk of
injury.
List of Subjects in 16 CFR Part 1240
Consumer protection, Imports, Infants and children, Labeling, Law
enforcement, Incorporation by reference.
For the reasons stated in the preamble, the Commission amends Title
16 of the Code of Federal Regulations by adding part 1240 to read as
follows:
PART 1240--SAFETY STANDARD FOR MAGNET SETS
Sec.
1240.1 Scope, purpose, and effective date.
1240.2 Definitions.
1240.3 Requirements.
1240.4 Test procedure for determining flux index.
1240.5 Findings.
Authority: 15 U.S.C. 2056 and 2058.
Sec. 1240.1 Scope, purpose, and effective date.
This part 1240, a consumer product safety standard, prescribes
requirements for magnet sets, as defined in Sec. 1240.2, and for
individual magnets that are marketed or intended for use with or as
magnet sets. These requirements are intended to reduce or eliminate an
unreasonable risk of injury to consumers who ingest magnets that are
part of magnet sets. This standard takes effect on April 1, 2015 and
applies to all magnet sets and individual magnets, as defined in Sec.
1240.2, that are manufactured or imported on or after that date.
Sec. 1240.2 Definitions.
(a) The definitions in section 3 of the Consumer Product Safety Act
(15 U.S.C. 2052) apply to this part 1240.
(b) Magnet set means: Any aggregation of separable magnetic objects
that is a consumer product intended, marketed or commonly used as a
manipulative or construction item for entertainment, such as puzzle
working, sculpture building, mental stimulation, or stress relief.
Relevant factors in determining intended uses of a magnet set include,
but are not limited to: The manufacturer's stated intent (such as on a
label or Web site), if reasonable under the circumstances; the content
and nature of advertising, promotion, marketing, packaging, or display
relating to the product; and the uses for which the product is commonly
recognized by consumers.
(c) Individual magnet means: An individual magnetic object intended
or marketed for use with or as a magnet set as defined in paragraph (b)
of this section.
[[Page 59987]]
Sec. 1240.3 Requirements.
Each magnet in a magnet set, and any individual magnet, that fits
completely within the cylinder described in 16 CFR 1501.4 must have a
flux index of 50 kG\2\ mm\2\ or less when tested in accordance with the
method described in Sec. 1240.4.
Sec. 1240.4 Test procedure for determining flux index.
(a) Select at least one magnet of each shape and size in the magnet
set.
(b) Measure the flux index of each selected magnet in accordance
with the procedure in sections 8.24.1 through 8.24.3 of ASTM F963-11,
Standard Consumer Safety Specification for Toy Safety, approved on
December 1, 2011. The Director of the Federal Register approves this
incorporation by reference in accordance with 5 U.S.C. 552(a) and 1 CFR
part 51. You may obtain a copy from ASTM International, 100 Barr Harbor
Drive, PO Box 0700, West Conshohocken, PA 19428; telephone 610-832-
9585; www.astm.org. You may inspect a copy at the Office of the
Secretary, U.S. Consumer Product Safety Commission, Room 820, 4330 East
West Highway, Bethesda, MD 20814, telephone 301-504-7923, or at the
National Archives and Records Administration (NARA). For information on
the availability of this material at NARA, call 202-741-6030, or go to:
https://www.archives.gov/federal_register/code_of_federal_regulations/ibr_locations.html.
Sec. 1240.5 Findings.
(a) Degree and nature of the risk of injury. (1) Based on a review
of National Electronic Injury Surveillance System (NEISS) data, we have
determined that an estimated 2,900 ingestions of magnets from magnet
sets were treated in emergency departments during the period from
January 1, 2009 to December 31, 2013, an average of about 580 ingestion
incidents per year. From review of databases other than NEISS, we are
aware of 109 reported incidents occurring from January 1, 2009 through
June 24, 2014, involving the ingestion of magnets by children between
the ages of 1 and 15. Of those 109 incidents, 83 involved the ingestion
of high-powered, ball-shaped magnets that were contained in products
that meet the above definition of ``magnet set,'' and 17 of those 109
incidents possibly involved ingestion of this type of magnet. Thus, 100
reported incidents of ingestions involved or possibly involved magnets
from magnet sets. Hospitalization was required to treat 61 of the 100
incidents. In 81 of the 100 incidents, the magnets were ingested by
children younger than four years old, or between the ages of four and
12 years.
(2) Once ingested, these strong magnets begin to interact in the
gastrointestinal tract, which can lead to tissue death, perforations,
and/or fistulas, and possibly intestinal twisting and obstruction. If
left untreated, these injuries can lead to infection of the peritoneal
cavity and other life-threatening conditions. The number of magnets
swallowed increases the risk of attraction and injury; but as few as
two magnets can cause serious internal damage in a very short time. The
fact that many medical professionals do not appreciate the health
consequences of magnet ingestion increases the severity of the risk
because a doctor who is unfamiliar with these strong magnets may send a
child home and expect the magnets to pass naturally. There are also
health consequences to the treatment and surgery for removal of
ingested magnets. There may be a risk of gastrointestinal bleeding;
leakage of holes that were repaired; rupturing of resectioned bowels;
temporary paralysis of the bowels; use of a colostomy bag; IV feeding
initially, or for some longer time period; and compromise of nutrition
and digestive function. Long-term health consequences can be severe, as
well: loss of intestinal tissue; compromised nutrition absorption;
adhesions and scarring of intestines; need for a bowel transplant; and
possible impediments to fertility for girls. Even children who pass the
magnets naturally and do not require surgery still need close
observation by doctors and may undergo sequential x-rays, thus,
exposing children to repeated dosages of radiation.
(b) Number of consumer products subject to this part. The market
for magnet sets increased substantially from the time magnet sets were
first introduced, through mid-2012. We estimate that the number of
magnet sets that have been sold to U.S. consumers since 2009, the first
year of significant sales, may have totaled about 2.7 million sets,
representing a value of roughly $50 million. Because of CPSC
enforcement activity and actions taken by firms since mid-2012, most
firms have ceased selling the magnet sets. Actual sales since the end
of 2012 by the firms remaining in the market are unknown but believed
to be small. The remaining major importing firm that continues to sell
the products is estimated to hold a market share of less than 2 percent
of pre-enforcement action sales. The approximate number of products
subject to this part (in terms of unit sales) could be fewer 25,000
sets per year.
(c) The need of the public for magnet sets and the effects of this
part on their utility, cost, and availability. (1) We cannot estimate
precisely the use value that consumers receive from magnet sets. In
general, use value would be the amount of money that consumers expend
on the product, plus the consumer surplus (i.e., the difference between
the market price and the maximum amount consumers would have been
willing to pay for the product). Magnet sets of the type that have been
involved in incidents would not comply with this part. Therefore,
consumers will no longer be able to obtain utility from these magnet
sets. Although magnet sets clearly provide utility to purchasers,
magnet sets are not necessities. Products that meet the requirements of
this part might be developed that would serve some of the purposes of
magnet sets. This part would continue to allow strong magnets for other
uses, such as commercial or industrial uses.
(2) Individual magnets that are intended or marketed for use with
or as magnet sets also must comply with the requirements of this part.
The Commission is aware that firms selling magnet sets have offered
individual magnets. To avoid firms circumventing the rule by selling
individual magnets that are nevertheless intended or marketed to be
used as magnet sets, this part covers such individual magnets.
Individual magnets sold for other uses are not subject to this part.
Thus, this part does not affect the need for, utility, or availability
of individual magnets that are sold for uses other than as magnet sets.
(d) Other means to achieve the objective of this part, while
minimizing the impact on competition and manufacturing. (1) The
Commission considered various alternatives to the requirements
specified in this part. This part requires that if a magnet set
contains a magnet that fits within the small parts cylinder that CPSC
uses for testing toys, all magnets from that set must have a flux index
of 50 kG\2\ mm\2\ or less. In addition, individual magnets intended or
marketed for use with or as magnet sets must meet these requirements.
We do not believe that options other than a rule establishing these
requirements would sufficiently reduce the number and severity of
injuries resulting from the ingestion of magnets from these magnet
sets. The circumstances associated with this product limit the likely
effectiveness of warning labels. Despite existing warning labels and
market restrictions, ingestion incidents have continued to occur.
Parents and caregivers may not
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appreciate the hazard associated with magnet sets. Accordingly, parents
and caregivers will continue to allow children access to the product.
Children may not appreciate the hazard and will continue to mouth the
items, swallow them, or in the case of young adolescents and teens, use
the magnets to mimic body piercings. Once the magnets are removed from
their carrying case, the magnets bear no warnings to guard against
ingestion or aspiration; the small size of the individual magnets
precludes the addition of any warning. Because individual magnets from
magnet sets are shared easily among children, many end users of the
product are likely to have had no exposure to any warning.
(2) The Commission has considered other alternatives to reduce the
risk from magnet sets: alternative performance requirements, such as
setting a different flux limit or requiring bittering agents; safer
packaging requirements, such as requiring a specific design for storage
containers or requiring child resistant packaging; sales restrictions;
continued corrective actions; and taking no action. Some of these
alternatives may not be within the Commission's authority. Although
each of the alternative actions would have lower costs and less impact
on small business, none is likely to significantly reduce the injuries
associated with ingestion of magnets from magnet sets.
(e) Unreasonable risk. (1) As stated in paragraph (a) of this
section, according to NEISS, an estimated 2,900 ingestions of magnets
from magnet sets were treated in emergency departments during the
period from January 1, 2009 to December 31, 2013, an average of about
580 ingestion incidents per year. From sources other than NEISS, CPSC
has reports of 100 incidents of ingestions that involved or possibly
involved magnets from magnet sets, including one fatality.
(2) For the regulatory analysis, we considered the period of time,
2009 through June 2012, before CPSC's compliance activities affected
the market. We identified 86 ingestions of high-powered and/or ball-
shaped magnets, which occurred from 2009 through June 2012 reported
through NEISS. These incidents were determined to involve, or possibly
involve, magnet sets. Based on these 86 incidents, we have determined
that an estimated 2,138 ingestions of magnets from magnet sets were
treated in emergency departments from January 1, 2009 to June 2012.
About 11 percent of the victims of these ingestion incidents required
hospitalization, as opposed to victims who were treated and released.
The 2009 through June 2012 NEISS estimates suggest an estimated annual
average of about 610 emergency department-treated injuries, including
544 injuries that were treated and released and 66 injuries that
required hospitalization. About 60 percent of these emergency
department-treated ingestions involved children ages 4 through 12
years. Additionally, based on estimates from the Commission's injury
cost model (ICM), there were another 319 injuries treated annually in
locations other than hospital emergency departments (such as doctors'
offices, clinics, ambulatory surgery centers, or direct hospital
admissions).
(3) After including the injuries treated outside of hospital
emergency departments, there was an annual average of about 929
medically attended injuries involving ingestions of magnets that were
defined as at least ``possibly of interest'' during the period from
2009 through June 2012. Injuries resulting from such ingestions of
magnets can be severe and life threatening. The risk posed by these
magnets may not be appreciated by children or caregivers, who may
assume, mistakenly, that the consequences of ingesting magnets would be
similar to ingesting any other small object. However, once ingested,
these strong magnets do not pass naturally. Rather, these magnets are
mutually attracted to each other and exert compression forces on the
trapped gastrointestinal tissue.
(4) We estimate that these injuries resulted in annual societal
costs of about $28.6 million (in 2012 dollars) during the 2009 through
June 2012 time period. The average estimated societal costs per injury
was about $27,000 for injuries treated in locations other than
emergency departments (such as physicians' offices, clinics, ambulatory
surgery centers, or direct hospital admissions); about $21,000 for
injuries that were treated and released from emergency departments; and
about $130,000 for injuries that required admission to the hospital for
treatment. Preventing these injuries would be the expected benefit
resulting from the rule.
(5) The costs of the rule would consist of the lost producer
surplus to firms that produce and sell magnet sets, plus the lost use
value that consumers would experience when magnet sets that do not
comply with the rule are no longer available. Sales of magnet sets
averaged roughly 800,000 sets annually during the 2009 through mid-2012
time period, with an average retail price of about $25 per set in 2012.
Thus, total industry revenues averaged about $20 million annually
(i.e., 800,000 sets x $25 per set) in 2012 dollars. The average import
cost of the magnet sets to U.S. importers, a major variable cost, may
have amounted to about $10 per set, or an average of about $8 million
annually (i.e., 800,000 sets x $10 import cost per set). We estimate
other variable costs associated with the production, packaging,
marketing, and distribution of the magnet sets would constitute a
significant proportion of the remaining difference between revenues
($20 million) and import costs ($8 million). If we assume that variable
costs amount to about half of the difference, lost producer surplus
would amount to about $6 million.
(6) Thus, we estimate costs of the rule to be about $6 million in
lost producer surplus and some unknown quantity of lost utility.
Considering the injuries associated with magnet sets--and the resulting
societal costs, balanced against the likely impact that the rule would
have on firms producing and selling the product, and on consumers who
would lose the utility of the product--we conclude that magnet sets
pose an unreasonable risk of injury and that the rule is reasonably
necessary to reduce that risk.
(f) Public interest. The regulations in this part are in the public
interest because they would reduce deaths and injuries associated with
magnet sets in the future. A rule establishing requirements that would
eliminate magnet sets of the type that have been involved in incidents
will mean that children will have less access to this product, thereby
reducing the number of incidents of children swallowing the magnets and
the resulting cost to society of treating these injuries.
(g) Voluntary standards. Currently, there is no voluntary standard
for magnet sets, nor any activity to develop a voluntary standard for
magnet sets.
(h) Relationship of benefits to costs. (1) Based on reports to the
CPSC, ingestions of small magnets contained in magnet sets have caused
multiple, high-severity injuries that require surgery to remove the
magnets and repair internal damage. Based on the information discussed
in paragraph (e) of this section, we estimate that the benefits of this
part might amount to about $28.6 million annually.
(2) The costs of the rule, in terms of reduced profits for firms
and lost utility by consumers, also are uncertain. However, based on
annual sales estimates available for the 2009 through June, 2012, study
period, these costs could amount to about $6 million in lost producer
surplus and some unknown quantity of lost utility.
(i) Least burdensome requirement. We have considered several
alternatives to
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this part. We conclude that none of these alternatives would adequately
reduce the risk of injury. Alternative performance requirements might
allow a different flux index for magnets contained in magnetic sets or
require the addition of an aversive (bittering) agent to the magnets.
Theoretically, these alternatives might allow continued production of
some current products. However, it is unclear whether a different flux
index would succeed in making products that have the desired physical
qualities that make them sufficiently enjoyable to adults, and at the
same time eliminate the characteristics that make these strong magnets
hazardous to children. Furthermore, the effectiveness of aversive
agents in reducing magnet ingestions is questionable. We have
considered the possibility of requiring rigorous warnings on the
products or in the instructions for the products. However, magnet sets
currently and formerly on the market provide warnings concerning the
potential hazard to children. Accordingly, it is unlikely that even
strengthened warnings would substantially reduce the incidence of
magnet ingestions. This is particularly true for incidents involving
older children and adolescents. Moreover, children who are old enough
to understand the warnings may still not abide by them. Some type of
sales restriction, limiting the location where magnet sets could be
sold, might be possible. However, even with restrictions on sales,
ingestions are still likely to occur as children encounter these
magnets in the home, at school, or other locations where adults have
brought them and made them available to children. The Commission could
continue to address the hazard from magnet sets through corrective
actions, i.e., recalls of the product. However, these actions would not
prevent additional companies from entering the market and importing
magnet sets into the country in the future. The Commission also has the
option of taking no regulatory action. Although it is possible that,
with increased awareness of the hazard over time, some reduction in
ingestions could occur, the magnitude of any such reduction in
incidents is uncertain and would likely be smaller than those resulting
from the requirements of this part.
Dated: September 26, 2014.
Todd A. Stevenson,
Secretary, U.S. Consumer Product Safety Commission.
[FR Doc. 2014-23341 Filed 10-2-14; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 6355-01-P