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Water Safety Can Save Lives

Drowning is a leading cause of preventable death in children and teens. Among young children, most drownings happen in home pools or hot tubs. In teens, drowning is more likely to happen in oceans, lakes and rivers. It happens fast and is usually silent. Be sure to use all these layers of protection. You never know which one will save a life.

Assign a Water Watcher

There should always be an adult water watcher while children are in and around a pool or any body of water. The water watcher should be within an arm’s length of young children and beginner swimmers. They should always keep their eyes on kids who are in the water, even older children who can swim. The water watcher should not use a cellphone, socialize, drink alcohol or do anything else that might be a distraction. At a party, have adults take turns as water watcher. Even if a lifeguard is on duty, a water watcher also should watch kids.

Use Fences/Alarms/Covers

All pools (including above-ground pools) and hot tubs should have a fence around them with a self-closing, locked gate. Add even more protection with door and window alarms that chime when opened to alert a parent that a child is going outside (you can find inexpensive, simple alarms online) and pool alarms that go off when someone enters the pool. If you can’t fence around a spa or hot tub, be sure they are securely covered when you aren’t using them.

Sign up for Swim Lessons

Schedule swimming lessons for kids when they’re at least 1 year old. Swim lessons do not replace the need for a water watcher, but learning to swim makes drowning less likely. Check with your local recreation centers or search the Red Cross website for classes taught by a qualified instructor. Ask about free or reduced-rate lessons. If you don’t know how to swim, consider taking lessons too.

Learn CPR

Every parent should know how and when to do CPR. It brings blood to the heart, brain and other organs and starts breathing until health care providers can give the person advanced life support. Done correctly, CPR can save a person’s life.

Use Life Jackets

Children and adults should wear Coast Guard-approved life jackets while on a boat (even if they can swim). Life jackets that are in a cabinet can’t protect someone from drowning if they are suddenly thrown into the water. Water wings and other “floaties” do not protect children from drowning. Life jackets and “floaties” should be used along with — not instead of — adult supervision.

No Alcohol or Drugs

Alcohol and/or drug use increases the risk of drowning while swimming or boating. Talk to your teens about these risks. Set a good example by making sure all water watchers and boat drivers do not use alcohol or drugs.

Home Safety

Empty all bathtubs, baby pools and water buckets after use. Put locks on bathroom doors and toilets and consider more home water safety improvements.

Talk to Teens

Even teens who are strong swimmers are at risk of drowning. Talk to your teens about never swimming alone and other ways to stay safe in the water.

HELPFUL RESOURCES: kidshealth.org | watersmartfl.com | ndpa.org

Well Beyond Medicine
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