IKEA Recalls 29 Million Dressers After 6 Deaths

IKEA Re-Announces Dresser Recall After 8th Death

The recall was issued after yet another death was reported. In February, a 22 month-old boy from Minnesota named Theodore “Ted” McGee died after tipping a MALM dresser on himself when his parents thought he was sleeping.

Last year, IKEA reported two deaths and started offering free wall-anchoring kits, but continued to manufacture and sell the dressers. The problem is that most people do not bolt their dressers to the wall.

For this reason, the American furniture industry has adopted voluntary design standards to prevent tip-over accidents. IKEA furniture does not meet these standards and fails even the most basic stability tests.

Check out this video from Inside Edition:

Lawsuits have been filed by the families of several children who died. An attorney representing one family said:

When you are familiar with how a product is used, when you have intimate and actual knowledge that tip-overs of your furniture can easily occur and have occurred dozens of times, you can only stick your head in the sand for so long.”

One child dies every two weeks in tip-over accidents involving furniture, TVs, or appliances, according to a warning from the Consumer Products Safety Commission (CPSC)

Deaths linked to IKEA furniture tip-over accidents:

Ikea MALM Dresser Recall

Source: Reuters