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Too Many Parents Leave
Children Alone in Bathtub
Excerpt by
Charnicia E. Huggins, Reuters Health
Nearly one in three young
children are left alone in the bathtub by their parents for some
amount of time, putting them at risk for drowning, according to
a report released Monday.
The American Academy of Pediatrics'
Committee on Injury and Poison Prevention advises parents to "never--even
for a moment--leave children alone in bathtubs, spas, or wading
pools...or other open standing water."
Yet the new study findings show
that the "Academy says one thing, and parents are doing another,"
study author Dr. Harold K. Simon told Reuters Health.
"We need to improve on this disconnect
and just raise public awareness," said Simon, an associate professor
of pediatrics and emergency medicine at Emory University and Children's
Healthcare of Atlanta, both in Atlanta, Georgia.
What parents think is a few seconds
away from watching their children can become a few minutes and
then "a tragic situation," Simon added.
In 1999, nearly half of the 1,345
accidental drownings among Americans younger than 20 were among
children five years old and younger, according to the National
Center for Injury Prevention and Control. Thirty-two percent of
the drownings occurred among toddlers and infants who had not
yet turned two years old.
And almost 60% of unintentional
drownings among children up to one year old occurred in bathtubs.
In their study of 259 families,
Simon and his team investigated the level of supervision parents
and guardians gave to their children while bathing.
They found that 31% of parents
and caregivers left a child alone in the bath, for as little as
a few seconds to as long as five minutes or more.
Twenty-one children age two or
younger--when drowning risk is especially great--were left unsupervised
at some time. Five of them were unsupervised for more than two
minutes, as were four children age one and younger.
In one case, a five-month-old child
was left alone for more than two minutes as the caregiver went
to get a towel. In another, an eight-month-old was left unsupervised
for more than five minutes as the caregiver cooked a meal.
Parents also left their child unsupervised
so they could talk on the telephone, get diapers or check on their
other children, the investigators report in the March/April issue
of the journal Ambulatory Pediatrics.
In other findings, although most
young children were usually supervised by an adult during bath
time, some families relied on the child's older siblings. Five
families reported that a sibling younger than 10 watched over
a younger child in the bathtub--including a five-year-old who
was left responsible for a 22-month-old.
About 8 percent of study participants
said their children bathed alone before the age of five.
Although the study concentrated
on bathtubs as a potential drowning location, children are also
at risk of drowning in high standing buckets and even toilets,
Simon said.
At young ages, he explained, children
tend to be more top-heavy, with large heads, so "if they tip into
(a bucket or other object), it's a situation where they just can't
tip out of it," and can drown in a small amount of water.
Simon hopes that the study's findings
can help raise awareness that the lack of bathtub supervision
"is a problem," and that healthcare providers can make people
more aware of it.
The "biggest tragedy" is for a
parent to say, "it was only for a minute," and then realize that
something terrible has happened, Simon said.
"Even a short period of time in
a high-risk situation can be devastating."
SOURCE: Ambulatory Pediatrics 2003;3.
Reference
Source 89
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