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New Zealand Teen Has Surgery After Swallowing Up to 100 Banned Magnets as Temu Opens Inquiry

The case has renewed scrutiny of enforcement of New Zealand’s ban on small high‑power magnets sold through overseas online marketplaces.

Overview

  • X-rays showed four linear chains of neodymium magnets in separate bowel segments after the teen reported ingesting 80–100 pieces a week earlier.
  • Surgeons at Tauranga Hospital removed the magnets and resected necrotic sections of small bowel and caecum caused by pressure from the magnet clusters.
  • The patient was discharged eight days after surgery, and clinicians cautioned that magnet injuries can lead to later complications such as obstruction or hernia.
  • New Zealand has prohibited personal-sale of small high‑power magnets since 2013/2014, yet the items remain accessible through cross-border e-commerce.
  • Temu said it launched an internal review, contacted the NZMJ authors, and is reviewing listings but has not confirmed the specific product or purchase.