Injuries are common. According to Jim Barber, spokesman for the National Association of Amusement Ride Safety Officials, "It happens all the time. These are probably the most dangerous amusement devices they have. You see more injuries on inflatables than almost any other amusement ride you can think of – more than roller coasters." In 2010, "as many as 31 U.S. children per day were treated for injuries sustained in a bounce house, or one child every 46 minutes". An estimated 65,000 children under the age of 17 were injured from 1990 to 2010. In May 2001, the U.S.
Consumer Product Safety Commission released a bulletin outlining the dangers and recommended safety precautions for operating an inflatable structure. Injuries caused by inflatable rides were rising in the United States, according to a 2012 study published in the journal
Pediatrics, which found a 15-fold increase from 1995 to 2010, Although rising, the number of injuries related to inflatable amusements is small when compared to the more everyday hazards of playgrounds and skateboards, which respectively were linked to an estimated 270,000 and 114,000 injuries in 2012. In a survey spanning 2003–2013, the most common injuries were fractures, strains, sprains, dislocations, contusions, abrasions, and lacerations. An estimated 88% of the injured were less than 15 years old. Most injuries occur due to falls or collisions with another child. Some severe fall injuries occur after wind lifts bouncy castles skyward. Some more notable incidents have included: • In South Yorkshire in England a boy died in August 2003 while using one, he had climbed onto the wall and fell out of the structure head-first. • A boy's parents sued the hirers of a jumping castle in 2005 after he was given brain damage when another boy somersaulted onto him. An appeal was lodged, and the verdict was overturned. • An eight-year-old girl died in May 2011 after falling head first from a bouncy castle onto a concrete pavement. • In July 2015 two children were killed and three seriously injured when a gust of wind lifted a bouncy castle over 60 feet off the ground in Tartu county, Estonia. • A seven-year-old girl was killed in England on 27 March 2016 after a sudden gust of wind lifted an inflatable bounce house into the air and carried it nearly a mile away. • A child died in Girona (Spain) on May 7, 2017. • A girl was thrown 20ft in the air from a bouncy castle on Gorleston beach, Norfolk, UK on 01 July 2018. She died of her injuries in hospital. • In December 2021, six children died and three others were critically injured in a jumping castle
incident at the Hillcrest Primary School in
Devonport, Tasmania, Australia. According to witnesses, the children fell from a height of about after a large gust of wind blew the castle into the air. Jumping castles were banned from use by schools in Tasmania until further notice shortly after. • Two girls, aged four and eight, were killed after a gust of wind lifted a jumping castle into the air in Mislata, Spain on 4 January 2022. The eight-year-old died the following day whereas the four-year-old died one week after the event. ==See also==