
Jon came into our office because he wanted to see whether the experts at Huszti Dental Care could repair a tooth he had recently chipped.
When our hygienist asked how it happened, he grew sheepish.
“I’m embarrassed to say that I was walking in downtown Milford and reading a text on my phone and I walked right into a light pole,” he said. Then he laughed. “And I’m the one always telling my kids to put their phones down and pay attention to what’s happening around them.”
Jon is right with that warning. Head, neck and facial injuries have been rising since 2007, which not-so-coincidentally is the year Apple released its iPhone, the first successful smartphone in the United States.
Risk education needed for Milford, Highland young people
Researchers have found that cuts and bruises to the face and neck were the most common injuries to people using their cellphones while walking. There are many studies under way examining the link between cellphone use and automobile accidents, but a group from Rutgers New Jersey Medical school was the first to look at these so-called “ambulatory cellphone use injuries.”
Their findings were published online in the journal JAMA Otolaryngology-Head & Neck Surgery.
So, listen to Jon — whose tooth, by the way, was easily and quickly repaired and looks as good as new. Pay attention to what’s going on around you, you’ll stay safer and out of the dental chair for an emergency procedure.








