Ikea has warned customers they must use a wall-anchoring kit with its drawers and dressers after two US toddlers were killed last year.
The US Consumer Product Safety Commission (CPSC) said Ikea received reports of two children who died after chests from the Malm range of furniture tipped over and fell on them.
It urged consumers to stop using all Ikea children's chests and dressers taller than 60cm and adult chests and dressers taller than 75cm, unless they are securely anchored to the wall.
It said a free wall-anchoring kit should be used to secure Malm and other Ikea chests and dressers to the wall.
Ikea UK and Ireland customer relations manager Gerard Bos said that product safety and quality are top priorities for Ikea.
He said: "Furniture tip-over is a serious safety risk in the home, however Ikea chests of drawers and dressers are safe to use when assembled according to the assembly instruction and attached to the wall using the restraints provided in the packaging of these products.
"Ikea is committed to raising awareness of the hazard of furniture tip-over and in many Ikea markets, including the UK, we are running a safety awareness campaign called 'Safer Homes Together - Secure It!' in order to raise awareness of this issue.
"As part of the ongoing campaign, Ikea US, in cooperation with the US Consumer Product Safety Commission, yesterday announced a free wall-anchoring kit programme."
He said Ikea already provided restraints and instructions with all floor-standing units, and warnings about their importance were included in the assembly instructions.
The CPSC and Ikea received a report that in February last year a two-year-old boy died after a Malm six-drawer chest tipped over and fatally pinned him against his bed, the statement said.
They also received a report that in June last year a 23-month-old child died after he became trapped beneath a three-drawer Malm chest that tipped over.
Neither chest had been secured to the wall.
Ikea and the CPSC had also received 14 reports of tip-over incidents involving Malm chests, resulting in four injuries.
Since 1989, Ikea was aware of three additional reports of deaths from tip-overs involving other models of its chests and dressers, the CPSC said.
Consumers should move unanchored chests and dressers into storage or other areas where they cannot be accessed by children.
The Malm range of chests have been sold since 2002.