Keeping kids safe in the summer is more challenging than at any other time of the year. A child safety study by the National Safe Kids Campaign revealed that May marks the start of a trauma season during which children are at the highest risk of severe injury or death.
In the average summer children ages 14 and under will be rushed to emergency rooms nearly 3 million times for serious injuries resulting from motor vehicle crashes, drownings, bike crashes, pedestrian incidents, falls and other hazards. More than 2,500 of these children will die.
A toddler suddenly acquires a new skill and climbs over a pool fence. An 8 year old mistakenly darts into a street to chase a ball. A driver fails to notice the neighbor's children playing in his driveway as he backs out the family car. These are just a few of the tragic scenarios that make summer weather a season of danger for children 14 and under.
While medical professionals have long assumed that childhood injuries follow a seasonal pattern, a first-ever national report on seasonal trends of fatal and nonfatal unintentional injury among children by the National Safe Kids Campaign [1]found that May through August account for nearly half of all injury- related childhood deaths, with July being the deadliest month.
The study was based on data collected over a five-year period throughout seven regions of the country. Among the findings:
Parents must exercise increased care over a child's safety during summer months. While we encourage children to be active and spend time outdoors, they need to understand the consequences of not taking safety precautions and should remember to wear a bike helmet and ride restrained in the car. Parents need to know that regardless of their children's age, it is ultimately their responsibility to provide their children with the proper safety devices and adequate supervision.
The study found that older kids experience the greatest increase of injury-related death during the summer months. This is primarily because children ages 10 to 14 tend to engage in more risky behavior and are presumably given more freedom from their parents. Young school-age children ages 5 to 9 are also at high risk because they lack the skills to make clear judgments necessary to bike, walk, swim and play safely without adult supervision. Many parents of kids this age also fail to restrain them properly in booster seats in motor vehicles, which can lead to severe injuries or even death in the event of a car crash.
Danger Zones
Drownings, bicycle injuries, falls, pedestrian accidents and motor vehicle crashes were the most commons causes of childhood injury or death.
Here's what you need to know to avoid tragedy:
Bikes: Bikes accidents [3]kill over 1500 children eaxch year, ages 14 and under. Of these deaths, more than half occurred during the summer. According to the AAP, head injury from cycling is the most common cause of death (70% to 80% of cases) and the leading cause of disability. A recent study in Seattle, Washington showed that helmets reduced the risk of head injury by 85% and brain injury by 88%. When purchasing a bike helmet, make sure it meets the bicycle helmet safety standards of the American National Standards Institute (ANSI) or the Snell Memorial Foundation. Any helmet meeting these standards is labeled.
Are we there yet?
As American families take to road this summer, don't forget to pack the correct child passenger restraints. Although all 50 states, the District of Columbia, Puerto Rico, and the U.S. Territories have child passenger safety laws, many of these laws have significant gaps and exemptions. Car seat/car incompatibility and improper installation can contribute greatly to childhood vehicular deaths and injuries. Simply reading label directions on car seats and using automobile seat belts can secure a child's safety.
Child safety is a year-round 24/7 job for parents. Keeping kids safe in the summer, although more challenging, isn't impossible. Equipping our kids and ourselves with the right gear and a little knowledge will go a long way towards keeping our kids safe in the summer.
Links:
[1] http://www.safekids.org/
[2] http://www.moneypit.com/article/pool-safety-kids
[3] http://www.cpsc.gov/cpscpub/pubs/346.html