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GLOBAL BRIEF

Stroller entrapment warning: if it is B. Childhood V9, stop using it today

Global briefing

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Only translations that preserve official sources and action checks are linked.

B. Childhood stroller warning checklist image in English
ONEPRESS safety briefing image based on the official CPSC warning for B. Childhood High Landscape baby strollers.

What this is based on

  • Checked: 2026-06-14 KST
  • Sources: U.S. Consumer Product Safety Commission warning dated June 11, 2026, CPSC recalls index, SaferProducts reporting system

Who should read this

  • Families using imported strollers or travel systems bought online
  • Parents or guardians with order history from Shein or similar overseas marketplaces
  • Homes using a bassinet-convertible stroller or an infant carrier and stroller set
  • Anyone who received a stroller secondhand and remembers the shape more than the brand

What matters first

The U.S. Consumer Product Safety Commission says consumers should stop using B. Childhood High Landscape Baby Strollers immediately. This is not a comfort issue. The warning says a baby can become entrapped in the opening between the seat and the tray or front bar, creating a risk of serious injury or death.

The warning matters because the product description is practical enough for people to check at home. CPSC says the stroller has a black folding frame, gold-colored metal points, brown handle and front bar, and a 2-in-1 travel-system style seat that can open out like a bassinet. If your stroller also came with a portable infant carrier accessory, it deserves a closer look.

CPSC also says the product was sold on Shein.com for about $230 and may have been sold by third-party sellers on other websites. That means this is not something people can ignore just because they never saw a local recall message.

Three things to do now

  1. Check the rear seat label first and look for Model Number V9.
  2. If the shape matches the black frame, gold details, and brown handle/front bar combination, stop using it today even if you are unsure of the brand.
  3. Do not use it again for walks, naps, or quick indoor placement while you sort it out.

Three common situations

1. The brand name does not sound familiar, but the stroller looks similar

That is common with imported products. Many people remember the photo, color, or sale price rather than the brand. In this warning, the V9 label and matching design details are more useful than memory of the seller name.

2. It is part of a travel system and hard to replace right away

That is exactly why this needs a clear stop-use message. A travel system is convenient, but the CPSC warning is about an entrapment hazard, not a minor defect you can work around carefully.

3. You got it secondhand and do not know the original seller

You can still check it. The CPSC warning gives a direct identification point: Model Number V9 on the rear seat label. That makes it possible to screen a used stroller even without the original receipt.

Practical checklist

  • Check the rear seat label for Model Number V9
  • Look for a black folding frame with gold-colored metal points
  • Check whether the handle and front bar are brown
  • Check whether the seat opens into a bassinet-style 2-in-1 layout
  • Check whether an infant carrier accessory came with it
  • If it matches, stop using it today and move it out of daily use
  • Do not resell it, donate it, or pass it to another family

Easy to miss

This is a CPSC stop using immediately warning, not a routine consumer notice. The safest approach is to identify the stroller in your home first, not to wait for a seller message or a local alert.

It is also easy to think, “nothing bad has happened so far.” That is a weak safety test for a structure-related hazard. A product can appear fine until the moment a child becomes trapped.

Official links

One-line takeaway

Do not judge this stroller by memory alone. Check the rear label for Model Number V9 today before the next outing.