More on yesterday’s story about a nasal-wedged maggot scare in Portsmouth, RI’s middle school (refresher: the Portsmouth Middle School sent parents a terrifying letter warning of a student Smartie-snorting epidemic and predicting that children would end up with maggots in their noses that feasted upon the sugar residue).
John McDaid, the investigative blogger who broke the story, tracked down Dr. Oren Friedman, Associate Professor, Otorhinolaryngology at the University of Pennsylvania, who was quoted in the letter the school sent home as warning that “frequent snorting could even rarely lead to maggots feeding on the sugary dust wedged inside the nose.”
“The quote regarding the maggots relates to the fact that when a foreign material, and especially a food, resides in the nose for a long period of time, infections may occur, worms may reside in the nose, even maggots may flourish in this environment — and we have encountered such a problem in the past. Hopefully the thought of possible maggots in the nose will help dissuade children from snorting the smarties.”
When asked in a followup if he had actually ever seen Smarties cause maggots, he replied, “just a possibility. i have seen maggots in the nose from other food products in general.”
Smarties doc hopes maggot threat will “dissuade children from snorting”