An Australian mother, Jodi de Groot, is warning other parents after a laundry detergent pod left her 4-year-old daughter, Luca, temporarily blind and recovering from multiple surgeries. While helping with chores, Luca bit into a colorful Omo pod, mistaking it for a toy. The pod burst in her face, spraying concentrated chemicals into both eyes and causing immediate, severe pain.
Jodi rushed Luca to the hospital after a poison control call, where doctors discovered chemical burns in both eyes. Over a 16-day hospital stay, Luca endured three surgeries, including a rare amniotic membrane transplant. Though she eventually began opening her eyes again, her left eye remains damaged, and her full vision may never return.
The experience has devastated the family and changed Lucaâs childhood. Jodi says the podâs packaging lacked urgency, with vague instructions to simply âseek medical advice,â and is now calling on manufacturers for stronger warnings and clearer safety messaging.

Unilever, which makes the pods, expressed sympathy and said safety is a top priority. But Jodi wants better public awareness. âIf I had known,â she said, âI never would have let her hold one.â Her story stands as a powerful reminder of the hidden dangers in everyday household products.