Soft-close doors are popular and can be found in homes, offices, schools, nurseries, and public spaces. These are made to shut slowly and quietly, reducing noise and preventing doors from slamming. But an important question remains: do they fully prevent finger injuries? Let's find out. How Do Soft-Close Doors Work? Soft-close doors use special hinges or dampers. These slow the door as it shuts. This means less force when the door closes. Studies from UK safety groups show that slower doors reduce impact injuries by up to 60%. But the gap near the hinge does not close fully. Small fingers can still get trapped there. This is why soft-close doors are helpful but not a complete solution. Can Finger Injuries Still Happen? The soft-close mechanism is great, but injuries can still occur. NHS data shows thousands of children visit A&E each year due to door-related finger injuries. So, even with soft-close systems, the hinge side is still risky. Children often place fingers near hinge...