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Keep
Kids Safe During the Holidays
The holiday season can be a potential
danger zone for children, warn doctors at Cedars-Sinai Medical
Center in Los Angeles.
They offer the following advice
on how you can ensure your children remain healthy and happy during
the holidays:
- Youngsters can be attracted by
candles. Make sure candles are out of reach of children so they
don't get burned by the flame or hot wax and can't tip the candle
and start a fire. Never hold a candle while carrying a baby.
- Many holiday ornaments are made
of glass. Broken fragments of these kinds of ornaments can cut
a child's fingers or even be ingested. Small ornaments and ornament
hooks may pose a choking hazard. Place small or breakable ornaments
high enough to be out of reach of small children. You can place
larger, unbreakable ornaments at lower levels.
- Never leave children alone in
a room with a burning fire in the fireplace. Be sure there is
a sturdy screen in front of the fireplace to prevent toddlers
from falling into a fire. The screen should be secured so it
can't fall on a child who grabs it.
- Be sure that your Christmas tree
is stable so it can't fall over if children grab it or try to
climb it. Keep real trees well watered to reduce fire danger.
- If your child has food allergies,
you need to be especially vigilant over the holidays.
- Some holiday foods -- such as
hard candies, nuts, vegetable sticks and hot dogs -- are a major
choking risk for young children.
- Ensure that homes you and your
children visit over the holidays are childproofed.
- If you host a party, clean up
the house immediately after it's over. Otherwise, your child
could get up in the night and choke on leftover food or drink,
or consume leftover alcohol or tobacco. Make sure you throw
away all balloons. Uninflated or broken balloons can pose a
choking hazard to young children.
- Have a laminated list of emergency
numbers posted by your phone so a babysitter can easily find
them in case of an emergency. The list should include the phone
numbers of your pediatrician, poison control, police, fire and
ambulance. It should also include the cell phone numbers of
both parents.
- Keep track of your children while
you're holiday shopping with them.
- If you live in a warm climate,
remember to be vigilant about pool and water safety.
- Check that all toys and gifts
are age-appropriate for your child. Remember that gift wrapping,
ribbons, plastic and paper bags are potential choking or strangulation
hazards.
- Keep all medicines and chemicals
locked up and out of reach at all times to prevent child poisonings.
- When you drive over the holidays,
secure your child in an approved car seat every time the child
is in the vehicle. Make your child wears proper safety equipment
-- including helmets -- if they're bicycling, rollerblading,
skateboarding or tobogganing.
More information
Here's where you can learn more
about choosing
safe toys.
Reference
Source 101
For more information on how to prevent other diseases, use
PreventDisease.com's "Quick
Prevention Resources".
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