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What are the side effects of amusement park?

Serious injuries associated with amusement parks can include:
  • Deadly falls.
  • Carotid artery dissection and stroke (tears to the major artery in the neck)
  • Traumatic brain injury.
  • Brain aneurysms.
  • Paralysis.
  • Drowning.
  • Inflatable ride injuries.
  • Lacerations.




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Common types of amusement park injuries
  • Head, neck, or back injury. These can result from spinning rides or rides that whip the rider around. ...
  • Stroke. Trauma to the ligaments in a rider's neck may cause a stroke. ...
  • Traumatic brain injury. ...
  • Brain aneurysms. ...
  • Lacerations, broken bones, or torn ligaments. ...
  • Death.


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Forward flexion of your spine or bending forward, along with the rotation and twisting from sudden turns, raises backside pressure of your disc where your spinal canal is. Movements like these can cause pain, particularly if you have a history of disc problems. They can also cause disc herniation.

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All symptoms of motion sickness usually go away in 4 hours after stopping the motion.

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It may look like it can be unsafe. But, in fact, coasters are some of the safest machines in the world.

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Say you're on a ride at the fair, and it's spinning you around and upside down. Your eyes see one thing, your muscles feel another, and your inner ears sense something else. Your brain can't take in all those mixed signals. That's why you end up feeling dizzy and sick.

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First, there are those long walks just to get on the roller coasters, then when you go on the thrill ride they're a good workout for your hearts and lungs. Roller coasters are good for stress relief, fighting phobias, and clearing your sinuses.

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Motion sickness occurs when your brain can't make sense of information sent from your eyes, ears and body. Lots of motion — in a car, airplane, boat, or even an amusement park ride — can make you feel queasy, clammy or sick to your stomach.

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Based on data collected from parks, IAAPA estimates the odds of being seriously injured on a fixed-site ride at a U.S. amusement park are 1 in 15.5 million rides taken. We really dedicate a lot of time to safety, not because it's a problem but just to make sure that it stays as safe as it is today, Wahl said.

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According to the medical team at Florida Hospital, the motions that your body goes through while on the topsy-turvy journey on the roller coaster is also experienced internally. This means that with every slide and turn, your brain, intestines, and other internal organs are also moving according to the motion.

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There is no set age, but you tend not to see many people in their 60s and older on roller coasters. Even if you can it is probably not a good idea if your body is vulnerable to unnatural g-forces.

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But, these fears and myths that people think about roller coasters are usually false. The odds of dying on a roller coaster are 1 in 300 million. The U.S. Consumer Product Safety Commission stated that there were approximately two deaths per year, attributed to roller coaster accidents.

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Canada's Wonderland is the safest amusement park in the world. In its life span, there have been no deaths, accidents, or personal injuries. Which country has the most amusement parks?

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We spoke to a physical therapist who said it's because of the inner ear. When you're riding a coaster is causes some confusion in your brain, which causes you to lose your balance. In return, you feel dizzy and may even vomit.

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