Back-to-School Safety Tips
Back to school? Time for a safety check. Use this list to prevent your kids from harm at school, at home, and at play.
Playgrounds
Each year, more than 200,000 kids are treated in U.S. hospital
emergency rooms for playground-associated injuries. Most of these
injuries occur when a child falls from the equipment. Take a look at the
surfaces of your local playground. There should be a 12-inch depth of
wood chips, mulch, sand, or pea gravel, or mats made of safety-tested
rubber or fiber material. (This surface will prevent possible head
injuries in case a child falls.) Here are more tips for checking the
safety of public playgrounds.
Bike Helmets
Since a growing number of kids are riding
their bikes to school, make sure your kids always wear their helmets.
All bike helmets manufactured or sold in the U.S. are required to meet
federal safety standards. Helmet use
can reduce the risk of head injury by up to 85 percent. There is one
exception: Kids shouldn't wear bike helmets when playing -- especially
on playground equipment.
Backpacks
Textbooks,
notebooks, lunch, toys... how much weight is your child toting back and
forth each day? Take the load off your child by following these backpack
safety tips.
Soccer
Many people don't associate soccer with injury.
One source of trouble is the soccer goal. To prevent soccer goals from
tipping over, make sure they're anchored into the ground. You can use
the following:
- auger-style anchors that screw into the ground;
- semi-permanent anchors, which require a permanently secured base that is buried underground combined with the use of tethers or bolts to secure the goal;
- peg, stake, or j-hook style anchors that are driven into the ground; or
- sandbags or counterweights if the goals are indoors.
Jacket and Sweatshirt Drawstrings
Drawstrings may look
trendy, but they can get caught on lots of stuff, including elevators,
playground equipment, and cribs. Remove drawstrings on hoods or around
the neck of clothing. If drawstrings at the waist or bottom of an
article of clothing are looking a tad long, trim them down to no longer
than three inches.
Loops on Window Blind Cords
Look at the blinds in your
house, or at your child's daycare or school. You or the teacher should
cut the loop on two-corded horizontal blinds and attach separate tassels
to keep kids from getting entangled in the cords. Vertical blinds,
continuous loop systems, and drapery cords use looped cords to function.
Do not cut these loops. Instead, install a permanent tie-down device.




- NicholasMama608
on Sep. 7, 2012 at 10:56 PM