Girl ends up with 3rd-degree burns from homemade slime

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Monday, March 27, 2017
Girl ends up with 3rd-degree burns from do-it-yourself homemade slime
Girl ends up with 3rd-degree burns from do-it-yourself homemade slimeSade Baderinwa has the story

There is a new warning for parents about a popular project for kids.

Homemade slime is a hot do-it-yourself trend right now, but it could also be putting your kids at risk.

One child in Massachusetts ended up with third-degree burns on her hands. Now, her mother is speaking out about the dangers.

For months, Siobhan Quinn thought she was winning the battle between electronics, social media and her 11-year-old daughter Kathleen.

"I thought it was great," she said. "I encouraged it, bought all the stuff, and then when they were gone, I bought more. She was being a little scientist...(Now), I feel terrible. I feel like the worst mother."

The fifth-grader was making homemade slime, just like seemingly everyone else at school. But last weekend, while at a sleepover, Kathleen woke up in the middle of the night in excruciating pain.

PHOTOS: Girl says she was burned by homemade slime

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Siobhan Quinn says her 11-year-old daughter, Kathleen, suffered severe burns from playing with homemade slime.
Photo/WCVB

"It felt like really hot and tingly," Kathleen said.

When Kathleen returned home the next day, her mother was instantly alarmed.

"She was crying in pain, 'My hands hurt, my hands hurt,'" Siobhan Quinn said. "When we looked at them, they were covered in blisters."

The Quinns took Kathleen to Southshore Hospital, where doctors determined the blisters were actually second- and third-degree burns, likely the result of prolonged exposure to borax one, of the main ingredients in homemade slime.

"You just have to really read the packages, know what you're mixing," Dr. Megan Hannon said. "Because there are certain things in the home that are just dangerous."

Kathleen is recovering, but she's missed a week of school and sleeps with her hands in splints.

It is a difficult lesson mom and daughter had to learn the hard way, but Siobhan hopes her story will resonate with other parents.

"I've had other mothers say, 'Oh, we've made it a million times, it's fine, nothing happened to my child,'" she said. "We made it a million times, too, and nothing else happened."

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