Jamie Quinlan was at a friend's house in Louth playing on the trampoline when the accident happened, according to The Louth Leader (Warning: graphic photo in link), which reported the spring hit the boy's back at 70 mph, narrowly missing his spine.
"The spring had come off the trampoline like a bullet. If it had hit elsewhere on Jamie's body, in his head or throat, we could have lost him," the boy's father, Ian Quinlan, told the newspaper.
Trampoline spring impales young boy's back in freak accident: "It could have been so much worse" https://t.co/w0mtrqMAlL
— Newsweek (@Newsweek) September 5, 2019
WOW. VERY DANGEROUS https://t.co/gb6xwCyCu4
— joyce kroff (@jkrealty) September 5, 2019
The spring was embedded more than 2 inches into the boy's back and required an emergency surgery to remove it, the Leader reported.
“When I was in the waiting room there, I was really nervous,” Jamie said.
“Sometimes it still feels like the spring is in my back, but I am getting a lot better and stronger now. I feel relieved that it wasn’t worse.”
Ian Quinlan said it was a very scary situation for the family.
"I want people to be aware of how dangerous trampolines can be if there's no cover on the springs, or if there's a gap," he told the newspaper.
Thousands of people are injured in trampoline accidents every year. In 2014, almost 105,000 people were treated in hospital emergency rooms for trampoline-related injuries, including broken bones, concussions, sprains and neck injuries, according to the Consumer Product Safety Commission.
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