PropertyValue
?:author
?:datePublished
  • 2007-09-26 (xsd:date)
?:headline
  • Do Walmart Flip-Flops Cause Chemical Burns? (en)
?:inLanguage
?:itemReviewed
?:mentions
?:reviewBody
  • In June 2007, Kerry Stiles of Ocklawaha, Florida, purchased a pair of Sand-N-Sun flip flops at Walmart. Soon after wearing the sandals (which she donned only a few times), she developed a painful skin rash or chemical burn on her feet that corresponded with the thong portion of her flip-flops. Stiles' experiences with the fearsome footwear were recounted in full on her web page. She chronicled the development of the injury in a series of photographs spanning the period between 22 June and 8 September 2007. (Some of the photos are better not viewed by the overly sensitive because they depict wounds of a disturbing nature.) The flip-flops had been manufactured in China. Others who had bought the same brand of sandals reported experiencing similar problems. In September 2007, Walmart instructed their stores to stop selling the product until they could conduct their own investigation. The definitive cause of Stiles' reaction to the flip flops is not known — while there might have been a noxious chemical incorporated into the footwear, the unfortunate woman (and others) could also have experienced an allergic reaction to some otherwise innocuous substance used in the manufacturing process. Walmart asserted they received only ten complaints about skin irritation related to these flip flops out of seven million pairs sold. The company said in a press release reported upon by Dallas television station KDFW on 11 September 2007 that: Product safety is a top priority at Wal-Mart and we are taking this report very seriously. Of several million of this product sold, we have had only a few similar claims. Nonetheless, we are removing the product from our shelves for testing and are preventing our registers from selling them. However, on 13 September 2007, a reporter in Tulsa told of finding a pair of the recalled flip-flops at a Wal-Mart in Broken Arrow, Oklahoma. Said the reporter: When we went to the check-out, the computer couldn't scan the price, but the cashier, just trying to be helpful, over-rode the machine and sold them to us. Stiles challenged Wal-Mart's claim of receiving only ten complaints about the brand of flip-flops that injured her, providing accounts (including photographs) on her web site of others similarly harmed. (en)
?:reviewRating
rdf:type
?:url