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PREVENT
DROWNING
CHILDREN
DROWN WITHOUT A SOUND
Drowning is the leading
cause of death for children under the age five. Child drownings can happen
in a matter of seconds and often there is no splashing to warn of trouble.
Curiosity, rapidly changing skills, and an inability to understand danger
place young children at risk.
Children can drown
in the time it takes to:
…Cross the room for
a towel (10 seconds), a child in a bathtub can become
submerged.
…Answer the phone
(20-30 seconds), a submerged child can lose consciousness.
…Put laundry in the
machine (3 to 4 minutes), a submerged child can sustain brain
damage.
…Answer the door and
sign for a package (4-6 minutes), a submerged child can suffer
permanent brain damage and brain death.
- Childhood drownings
and near drownings happen in seconds. Drownings usually
take place when there is a brief lapse in supervision or when children
are left
unattended.
- Most children
who drown were last seen in the home and had been out of sight for
less than 5 minutes.
- Most children were
in the care of either one or both parents. With parents doing
routine household activities and providing normal levels of supervision.
- Children can drown
in as little as one inch of water.
- Layers of protection
are key in preventing drownings. Barriers include: four sided
isolation fencing, self closing, self latching doors and gates (that
open outward),
automatic sliding door closets, door alarms, automatic pool covers,
pool nets, and
placing locks on doors out of the reach of children.
- Do not rely on
floating devices to keep children water safe.
- Keep a phone and
emergency numbers by the pool area.
- Learn Cardio Pulmonary
Resuscitation (CPR). Children as young as 12 can learn
CPR.
- Do not leave toys
in the pool or spa, as children will try to retrieve them.
- Keep climbable
objects away from pool fencing.
- Put locks on toilets
and keep children out of the bathroom.
- Empty wading pools,
ice chest, and buckets immediately after use.
- Instruct babysitters
and other family members on the hazards associated with pools
and other potential water sources.
- Have a “water watcher”
whenever children are in or around the pool area.
- Supervision is
no substitute for barriers, and barriers are no substitute for
supervision. They work together.
- Establish
and communicate child supervision.
Special note: Swimming
lessons for children less than 4 years of age will not provide
“drown proofing” and may give parents a false sense of security (source:
American
Academy of Pediatrics). Twenty-five percent of all young drowning victims
have had
swimming lessons.
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