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Christmas Holiday Accidents: Prevention, First Steps, and Integrative Recovery Support on DrAlexJimenez.com
The Christmas season brings fun, family time, and traditions. It also brings a predictable spike in injuries. People decorate, cook large meals, lift heavy boxes, travel more, and often rush to do everything quickly. Add winter weather and alcohol, and accidents become more likely.
On DrAlexJimenez.com, we focus on helping people recover from common injuries and prevent them from turning into long-term problems—especially neck pain, back pain, joint pain, headaches, and muscle strain. Dr. Alexander Jimenez, DC, APRN, FNP-BC, emphasizes a team-based, integrative model that blends chiropractic care and nurse practitioner-level clinical support to help patients improve function, reduce pain, and return to normal life safely. (Jimenez, n.d.-a; Jimenez, n.d.-b; Jimenez, n.d.-c)
Below is a clear guide to the most common holiday accidents, how to avoid them, and what an integrative chiropractic + NP approach can do after an injury.
The Most Common Christmas Holiday Accidents
Across safety reports and seasonal injury summaries, the same categories show up again and again:
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Falls (decorating, ladders, stairs, icy sidewalks)
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Fires and electrical accidents (lights, outlets, trees, candles)
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Burns (cooking, baking, hot drinks, grease)
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Cuts (wrapping tools, kitchen knives, broken ornaments)
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Strains/sprains (lifting, carrying, overdoing it in one day)
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Alcohol-related injuries (falls, risky choices, intoxication)
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Food poisoning and choking (big meals, leftovers, small toy parts)
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Toy and gift injuries (choking hazards, scooters/bikes, sharp edges)
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Car crashes (distracted, drowsy, or impaired driving)
These injury patterns are highlighted by national safety agencies and healthcare systems, especially around decorating, cooking, and driving. (CPSC, 2025; UCLA Health, n.d.; Elite Learning, 2025; TorkLaw, 2023)
Why Holiday Injuries Increase
Most holiday injuries are not “bad luck.” They usually come from a few common problems:
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Rushing to finish decorating, shopping, or cooking
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Distractions (phones, guests, kids, loud kitchens)
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More lifting than usual (bins, trees, groceries)
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Extra hazards in the home (cords, clutter, candles)
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Alcohol use, which reduces balance and judgment
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More driving, often at night and in traffic
When these stack up, even a small mistake can lead to a sprain, a burn, a fall, or a crash.
Falls: Ladders, Decorating, and Icy Walkways
Falls are one of the most common Christmas injuries, especially from ladders and rooftops. The U.S. Consumer Product Safety Commission (CPSC) reported that during the 2023 holiday season, about 14,900 people were treated in emergency rooms for holiday decorating-related injuries, averaging about 160 injuries per day, with nearly half involving falls. (CPSC, 2025)
Common fall scenarios
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Standing on chairs instead of a ladder
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Reaching too far to hang lights (“one more stretch”)
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Carrying boxes down stairs with blocked vision
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Slipping on ice, wet steps, or entry rugs
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Tripping over cords and clutter indoors
Quick fall-prevention checklist
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Use a stable ladder, not furniture. (UCLA Health, n.d.)
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Keep ladders on level ground, and don’t overreach.
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Have someone spot you.
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Wear shoes with adequate grip (not socks on slick floors).
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Keep cords out of walkways.
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Salt or sand icy paths and improve outdoor lighting.
Fires and Electrical Hazards: Lights, Trees, Candles, Outlets
Holiday décor looks great—but it can raise fire risk fast.
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Dry trees + heat sources
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Overloaded outlets
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Damaged light strings
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Candles near wrapping paper or garlands
Public fire safety summaries using national data report that U.S. fire departments respond to about 160 Christmas tree fires per year and about 790 decoration-related home fires per year (excluding trees), and that candles are a major driver of decoration fires in December. (Illinois Office of the State Fire Marshal, 2022) Healthcare guidance also highlights risks from trees, candles, and outlets during the season. (UCLA Health, n.d.)
Fire + electrical safety checklist
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Water live trees daily and remove them when dry. (UCLA Health, n.d.)
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Don’t overload outlets or “stack” extension cords.
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Replace damaged light strings (frayed wires = danger).
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Turn off tree lights before bed or when leaving home.
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Keep candles away from anything that can burn—or use flameless candles. (UCLA Health, n.d.)
Burns: Cooking, Baking, Hot Drinks, and Grease
Holiday cooking is a top source of burns because kitchens get crowded and distracted. (UCLA Health, n.d.; Elite Learning, 2025)
Common burn causes
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Reaching into a hot oven without proper mitts
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Steam burns from lids and pressure/heat traps
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Grease splashes from frying
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Hot coffee/cocoa spills
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Turkey deep fryers used unsafely
Burn-prevention checklist
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Don’t leave cooking unattended. (UCLA Health, n.d.)
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Keep kids/pets out of a “hot zone” around the stove.
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Turn pot handles inward.
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Use dry oven mitts that cover wrists.
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If using a fryer, follow strict safety rules and keep it outdoors. (CPSC, 2025)
Cuts: Wrapping Tools, Ornaments, and Kitchen Knives
Cuts rise in two places:
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Kitchen prep
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Gift wrapping/packaging
Common cut sources
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Rushing with knives while cooking
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Box cutters sliding through tape
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Broken ornaments or glass décor
Cut-prevention checklist
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Cut away from your body and keep fingers clear.
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Use a stable cutting board (no slipping).
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Don’t try to catch a falling knife.
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Clean up broken glass with thick gloves and proper tools.
Strains and Sprains: Lifting, Carrying, and Overdoing It
Back and neck strain are major holiday issues. People lift heavy bins, carry trees, move furniture, and do more in one weekend than they do all month.
Healthcare guidance calls out holiday back and neck strain from lifting and awkward positions as a common seasonal problem. (UCLA Health, n.d.)
Common strain triggers
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Lifting storage bins with a rounded back
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Twisting while carrying loads
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Carrying a tree alone
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Standing for hours cooking without breaks
“Spine-smart” lifting tips
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Bend your knees, keep the load close, and avoid twisting.
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Break big loads into shorter trips.
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Ask for help with trees and furniture.
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Take short movement breaks during cooking and wrapping.
Alcohol-Related Injuries: Falls, Bad Timing, Risky Choices
Alcohol increases injuries because it affects:
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balance
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reaction time
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decision-making
Holiday safety lists repeatedly include alcohol-related injuries and intoxication. (St John Ambulance, 2025; Elite Learning, 2025) Holiday crash risk is also commonly tied to impaired driving. (TorkLaw, 2023)
Safer holiday alcohol rules
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Avoid climbing ladders after drinking.
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No complex cooking while impaired.
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No driving—plan a sober ride.
Food Poisoning and Choking: Big Meals, Leftovers, Small Hazards
Foodborne illness increases during holidays when food sits out too long or cross-contamination happens.
CDC food safety guidance emphasizes four key steps to prevent food poisoning:
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Clean
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Separate
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Cook
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Chill (CDC, 2025)
FoodSafety.gov also teaches the same “clean, separate, cook, chill” approach. (FoodSafety.gov, 2023)
Food safety basics that prevent most problems
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Wash hands and surfaces often. (CDC, 2025)
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Keep raw meat separate from ready-to-eat foods. (CDC, 2025)
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Refrigerate leftovers promptly and reheat safely. (FoodSafety.gov, 2023)
Choking risks also rise due to hard candy, rushed meals, and small toy parts.
Toy and Gift Injuries: Choking, Sharp Parts, Riding Toys
Toy injuries spike after gift opening. UCLA Health highlights high numbers of toy-related emergency visits and notes scooters as a major contributor in one year’s data. (UCLA Health, n.d.)
Toy safety checklist
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Match toys to the child’s age label.
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Watch small parts (choking risk).
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Use helmets for scooters/bikes.
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Assemble toys correctly and tighten screws.
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Car Accidents: Distracted, Drowsy, and Impaired Driving
Holiday driving is riskier because there are:
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more drivers
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more nighttime travel
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more distractions
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more alcohol impairment
Seasonal safety summaries repeatedly list car accidents as a top Christmas risk. (TorkLaw, 2023; UCLA Health, n.d.)
Safer holiday driving checklist
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Put the phone away (or use driving mode).
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Plan extra time so you don’t speed and weave.
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Don’t drive drowsy.
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If you drink, don’t drive—period.
What To Do Right After a Holiday Injury
Not every injury needs the ER, but many need the right plan early so they don’t turn chronic.
Go to urgent care or the ER right away if you have:
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chest pain, trouble breathing, fainting
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signs of stroke (face droop, arm weakness, speech trouble)
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severe head injury symptoms (confusion, repeated vomiting, worsening headache)
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weakness, numbness, or loss of bowel/bladder control
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a deformed limb or inability to bear weight
For common sprains/strains (first 24–72 hours)
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Relative rest (avoid what sharply increases pain)
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Ice or heat, based on what helps
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Gentle walking/movement as tolerated
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Avoid “push-through” lifting and twisting
How DrAlexJimenez.com Approaches Recovery: Chiropractic + Nurse Practitioner Integration
Many holiday injuries are musculoskeletal:
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neck sprain/strain
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low back flare-ups
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shoulder or hip irritation
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knee/ankle sprains
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headaches linked with muscle tension and joint stress
On DrAlexJimenez.com, Dr. Alexander Jimenez describes an integrative model that blends chiropractic care with nurse practitioner-level clinical evaluation and broader wellness support. This includes personalized programs that may incorporate rehabilitation strategies and health optimization approaches. (Jimenez, n.d.-a; Jimenez, n.d.-b)
What chiropractic care can support after common holiday injuries
Depending on the person and the injury, chiropractic-focused care often aims to:
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reduce joint irritation and improve motion
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address mechanical spine-related pain
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support posture and movement patterns during recovery
Clinical guidelines for low back pain include spinal manipulation among non-drug options for many patients (when appropriate and no red flags are present). (Qaseem et al., 2017; Hauk, 2017)
What the Nurse Practitioner role adds (and why it matters)
An NP partner helps by:
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screening for red flags (fracture, serious nerve problems, infection)
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coordinating imaging/labs when needed (case-dependent)
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supporting safe pain strategies, often starting with nonopioid options (CDC, 2025)
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managing underlying health issues that slow healing (like diabetes, sleep problems, and inflammation risk)
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guiding nutrition and recovery habits during a season when routines change
CDC guidance encourages maximizing nonopioid therapies for many common pain situations and lists nonopioid and nonpharmacologic options. (CDC, 2025)
Why this combined approach can be helpful
In real life, holiday injuries often come as a “bundle,” such as:
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a fall causing back pain plus muscle spasm
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a crash causing neck pain, plus headaches and sleep disruption
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overexertion causing low back strain plus hip tightness
An integrated approach can help address:
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structure (spine/joints, movement quality)
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soft tissue (muscle tightness and strain patterns)
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rehab (stability, strength, safe return to activity)
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whole-person factors (sleep, stress, hydration, nutrition)
This is also consistent with how Dr. Jimenez describes multidisciplinary, patient-centered care on his site. (Jimenez, n.d.-a; Jimenez, n.d.-c)
Prevention That Works: A Realistic Holiday Safety Plan
Try this simple plan (it prevents most of the injuries we discussed):
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Decorate in short sessions (avoid marathon days)
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Keep floors clear (cords, boxes, wrapping paper)
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Use stable ladders and get a spotter
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Keep candles supervised or use flameless ones
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Don’t leave cooking unattended
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Lift smart and ask for help with heavy items
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Plan sober rides and don’t drive impaired
References
Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. (2025). Preventing food poisoning
Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. (2025). Nonopioid therapies for pain management
Elite Learning. (2025, December 1). 10 common holiday injuries and how to avoid them
FoodSafety.gov. (2023, September 18). 4 steps to food safety
Hauk, L. (2017). Low back pain: American College of Physicians practice guideline on noninvasive treatments
Illinois Office of the State Fire Marshal. (2022). OSFM stresses holiday decoration fire safety (PDF)
Jimenez, A. (n.d.-a). Dr. Alex Jimenez Chiropractor and injury recovery
Jimenez, A. (n.d.-b). Why choose Dr. Jimenez and clinical team?
Jimenez, A. (n.d.-c). Chiropractic and nurse practitioner for injury recovery
Qaseem, A., Wilt, T. J., McLean, R. M., & Forciea, M. A. (2017). Noninvasive treatments for acute, subacute, and chronic low back pain: A clinical practice guideline from the American College of Physicians
TorkLaw. (2023, December 20). Top 5 most common accidents during Christmas holidays
UCLA Health. (n.d.). 7 common holiday injuries and accidents (and how to avoid them)
U.S. Consumer Product Safety Commission. (2025). Happy holidays start with safety: CPSC urges families to cook, decorate, and select toys with care this season