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Wholehearted Assistance | The "Hidden Killer" in Toys: Neglected Packaging Plastic Bags


When buying toys, we always pick and choose carefully—

✅ The appearance should be attractive  

✅ The colors should be vibrant  

✅ The edges should be rounded  

✅ The material should be safe

The gameplay must be innovative

However, few people noticed the plastic bag containing the toys.

It is the "invisible killer" lurking within toys

It is thin, soft, and silent. In a child's eyes, it can be a "hat," a "tent," or even an "invisible cloak" during hide-and-seek. Yet, this seemingly insignificant small bag can snuff out a child's life in just a few minutes once it covers their mouth and nose.

Medical Warning: Plastic film can tightly adhere to a child's mouth and nose, creating an enclosed space that may lead to suffocation. According to clinical data, suffocation caused by covering the mouth and nose with a plastic bag can result in irreversible brain damage within 3-5 minutes and be fatal within 7 minutes.

How to say "toy safety standards"?                

International and domestic toy safety standards impose strict regulations on packaging plastic bags

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Additional .

2026 Year-Opening Warning: EU Has Recalled 10 Cases!

At the beginning of 2026, the EU Rapid Alert System for Non-Food Consumer Goods (Safety Gate) reported 10 toy product recalls involving excessively thin packaging plastic bags, the vast majority of which were toys sold online.

This data sends a strong regulatory signal:

Online sales are not beyond the law

Packaging plastic bags have become a key inspection item in the European Union

✅ Enterprises must ensure supply chain quality from the source

Three Suggestions for Toy Companies:

Self-inspection of inventory: Check whether the thickness of the plastic packaging bags for existing products meets the standards

Specify procurement requirements: Define the technical specifications for plastic bag thickness in the procurement contract

Retain the inspection report: Keep the third-party inspection report for market supervision review

Safety is no small matter, and packaging must comply with regulations. Don’t let a tiny plastic bag become the "last straw" that crushes a brand.