---
title: "Child teether recalls give Spartanburg parents a nursery-label checklist"
url: https://www.herespartanburg.com/child-teether-recalls-spartanburg-nursery-checklist/
date: 2026-06-28T06:05:03-04:00
modified: 2026-06-28T06:05:03-04:00
author: "Shaniqua Howard"
categories: ["Health Wellness"]
site: "HERESpartanburg"
attribution: "HERESpartanburg"
---

# Child teether recalls give Spartanburg parents a nursery-label checklist

*Source: [HERESpartanburg](https://www.herespartanburg.com/child-teether-recalls-spartanburg-nursery-checklist/) — June 28, 2026 by Shaniqua Howard*

Several baby and child product recalls are putting nursery labels back on the weekend checklist for Spartanburg parents, grandparents and caregivers. The affected product category includes pull-string teether toys and other nursery items flagged in recent independent recall coverage for choking or related safety hazards.

The practical step is simple: before a child keeps using a teether, lounger, stroller adapter or similar nursery product, compare the product name, model number, version and packaging details with the latest recall information from the manufacturer or retailer. If an item appears to match, remove it from use while you confirm the next step.

For Upstate households, this is less about panic and more about routine product housekeeping. Many baby products move between homes, day care bags, grandparents’ houses and church nurseries, which means the original box or receipt may not be in the same place as the product. A quick label check can help families catch an affected item before it is handed back to a child.

Parents should look for product tags, molded labels, lot numbers, pull strings, detachable pieces and small parts that could loosen with regular use. If the label is missing or unreadable, the safest next move is to pause use and contact the seller or manufacturer with photos of the item, purchase location and approximate purchase date.

Caregivers should also separate recalled or uncertain products from toy bins so they are not accidentally used by another adult. A zip bag with a note attached can keep the product, packaging and receipt together while the family checks refund, repair or disposal instructions.

The recall reports do not require families to make medical assumptions. If a child has mouthed or used a product that may be affected and is coughing, choking, gagging or acting unusually, caregivers should seek medical advice promptly. Otherwise, the immediate household action is to identify the item, stop use if it matches the recall and follow the product-specific instructions.

Spartanburg-area parents who rotate supplies between cars, diaper bags and relatives’ homes may want to check more than one location. Teethers and small nursery accessories often get separated from packaging after a few weeks of use, so a photo search, order history or retailer account can help identify the exact product version.

The same approach applies to child-care providers and anyone managing shared nursery supplies. Pull questionable items from circulation, document the product details and communicate with parents before returning anything to use. For small products that are hard to identify, erring on the side of removing the item is usually faster than trying to guess whether it is covered.
