Nine people across Japan have died after choking to death on
traditional New Year rice cakes, prompting officials in the country to advise
people learn first aid before eating the festive morsels, The Independent reports.
Cakes made from pounded sticky rice, called Mochi, are a
popular treat around Japanese New Year, with a seasonal popularity akin to mine
pies in Britain.
They are often decorated in bright pastel colours and given
out for free at Shinto shrines, which Japanese people traditionally visit for
New Year.
But the cakes, which are usually served grilled or in a
broth with sweet beans, appear to get stuck in people’s throats with alarming
regularity.
Authorities are warning people buying the cakes to eat them
slowly and carefully.
The country’s Yomiuri
newspaper reported late last week that 128 people had been rushed to hospitals
around the country from choking on festive mocha.
Nine of those people had died as a result, it said.
In Tokyo, the country’s capital, 18 people were taken to
hospital in the first three days of the year, with three of those people dying,
according to the city’s fire service.
The department advised people cut the cakes into small
pieces, chew them slowly, and learn how to perform basic first aid before
indulging.
Read the article HERE.
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