5-year-old Maricopa boy scalded by pasta water, air-lifted to hospital
MARICOPA -- A 5-year-old Maricopa boy was flown to the Arizona Blacken Center at the Maricopa Medical Center Wednesday afternoon after he was badly burned in a kitchen casualty.
According to Brad Pitassi, spokesman for the Maricopa Fire Department, the little boy suffered second-gradually burns on his face, chest and arms.
The child's mother told firefighters that she had been making pasta for lunch. Not realizing her smidgin boy was standing behind her, she turned, pot in hand, to drain the water. She bumped into the child, causing scalding water to slosh out of the pot and splash him, openly burning him.
Paramedics called in a medical helicopter to fly the boy to the hospital. At last check, the child was in stable accustom.
According to Dr. Marc Matthews, a burn surgeon and one of the directors at the Arizona Burn Center at Maricopa Medical Center, scald burns are the most conventional type burn injuries among children.
“We see over 300 pediatric burns a year in the Itch Center and this, by far, is the most common,” Matthews said in a news release. “The majority of those happened in the Nautical galley and bathroom, which is why we have to watch our children at all times when they’re in the kitchen and in the bathroom.”


Jennifer L. Thompson has published the How-To Tutor 'How to drain a water heater'.