WATCH: How viral egg-cracking prank could be harmful to children

Viral prank videos show parents breaking eggs on their young children's heads before pouring them into bowl

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Web Desk
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A compilation of people doing the viral egg-cracking trend on TikTok.

A viral trend has been making waves on TikTok where parents playfully prank their children by cracking eggs on their minors' heads, which is quite amusing but has been criticised by experts for being a trend that could harm your child.

The viral prank videos show parents breaking eggs on their young children's heads before pouring them into the bowl in front of them.

Children reacted differently to the prank on TikTok, with some even hitting the egg on their parents' heads. Experts have weighed in and cautioned those parents that it might have a negative impact on their child's health.

Medical professionals warned that this practical joke might have unanticipated short-term health consequences for their child, such as bruising or the transmission of germs from the egg.

Dr Meghan Martin who is a paediatric emergency medical physician at Johns Hopkins All Children’s Hospital said: "I was not a big fan of this at all. This is not something that benefits kids in any way, and I honestly don’t find it entertaining."

Martin also added that parents should be wary of getting raw yolks on children’s faces.

She said: "We're literally smacking salmonella on their foreheads. It’s harder to get a toddler to drink fluids when they’ve got a stomach bug or food poisoning, and so they’re more likely to end up in the hospital for IV fluids."

Amanda Mathers wanted to learn how hard the impact of the egg was after cracking one on her head.

“It was hard to crack that egg on my head and my fully developed skull,” Mathers said who is a pediatric occupational therapist.

"And I almost felt a shock of, like, tears behind my eyes just trying to slam that egg into my head."

However, Rebecca Burger-Caplan, clinical director of child, adolescent and family services at Mount Sinai Hospital in New York, said a one-off experience like the egg prank is unlikely to have long-term ramifications.

She noted, though, that "parents may have a choice of whether to help maintain a child's sense that they know what to expect from their parents, versus one where there’s a choice to kind of deviate from that expectation."

Both Martin and Mathers said they are concerned that young children could learn harmful behaviours because of the egg prank.

“These toddler brains are developing and they are like sponges, you know, so they are just taking in everything that’s happening in their environment,” Mathers said.

“And to think that they're witnessing their parents, purposely, you know, harm them … it was really shocking for me to see.”