By allowing ads to appear on this site, you support the local businesses who, in turn, support great journalism.
How not to spend Memorial Day at the ER
a0dade9653e5548b18f2561c3110bb35f217019d23c13347f8cb8b43dc4bccd4
Memorial Day can be a fun start to summer with your family. It's also a great way to spend an afternoon at the ER. Here are some common injuries associated with the unofficial start of summer, and how to avoid them. - photo by Jennifer Graham
Each year in May, the National Safety Council makes a grim prediction: how many of us will die in traffic accidents over the Memorial Day weekend.

Hazards lurk not only on the road, but in the relative safety of our own backyards. To keep us safe, STAT shared ways a holiday cookout can make us sick or send us to the emergency room, none of which involve cars.

Fly away. You may think twice about eating outside after learning what those buzzing flies are doing when they land on your food.

House flies stick out a part of their body called the labella when they land on a potential meal think of it as taking a free sample, wrote STAT's Megan Thielking. If they decide to chow down on a watermelon, for example, theyll regurgitate a little of that sample on the watermelon along with some acid to make their next bites easier to digest.

This means if you eat something a fly has landed on, youre consuming fly vomit. Yum. Better keep everything covered.

Bac off. Its wonderful when the supermarket tenderizes a cut of meat assuming it doesnt give you a bacterial infection. This can happen when bacteria lurking on the outside of the meat are pushed inside when the meat is punctured during the tenderizing process.

On the outside, bacteria normally die when the meat is cooked, but inside its more likely to survive to give you and your family E. coli.

The U.S. Department of Agriculture has just ordered companies to let consumers know when meat has been tenderized mechanically, STAT said. Meanwhile, use a meat thermometer to make sure your meat reaches at least 145 degrees internally, and let meat rest three minutes after cooking before serving, STAT said.

Watch the sticks. Every year, people go to the emergency room after sticking themselves with shish-kebab skewers, Thielking reported.

Dont be that guy. And if you know that guy, dont get too close.

They call it grilling out for a reason. Besides the risk of fire, theres another reason not to cook inside a garage or tent: You could get carbon-monoxide poisoning. Youd never do something that dumb, we know. But other people have, according to the American Journal of Emergency Medicine.

A problem that grates. Finally, though it seems like a good idea, buying a grill brush to scrub off the crusty residue of last years Labor Day barbecue can lead to problems. If youre not careful, metal bristles may cling to the grate, and they can stick to your hamburger or steak, then ride down your esophagus and do all sorts of damage.

Since 2002, more than 1,600 Americans have gone to emergency rooms because of injuries from wire-bristle grill brushes, a new study said.

So, rinse and wipe well. Or just buy a new grate.