Children are at high risk for injuries. But there are things you can do to lower the chances that your child will get hurt.
Leading causes of injury and death for children include:
Car crashes
Drowning
Accidental poisoning
Fires
Suffocation
Falls
The good news is that you can help prevent injuries from events like these by taking simple safety steps.
Prevent injuries inside and outside your home.
Be prepared and learn basic steps to protect your child.
Use a car seat, booster seat, or seat belt that’s right for your child’s size and age – on every trip.
Teach your child to swim, and closely watch your child in or near water.
Keep medicines, vitamins, and cleaning products where your child can’t see or reach them.
Use smoke alarms. Make and practice a fire escape plan for your home.
Make sure your child wears the right safety gear (like a helmet or pads) when playing sports or doing other physical activity.
Create a safe sleeping area for your baby. Keep soft objects (like pillows, blankets, crib bumpers, or toys) out of the crib. Always put babies to sleep on their back.
Get your child’s safety seat inspected by a certified child passenger safety technician. The technician will show you how to install and use the car seat the right way.
Have kids age 12 and under ride in the back seat. Make sure they are always buckled in correctly.
Set a good example.
Always buckle your seat belt when you drive or ride in a car.
Never drive after drinking alcohol or using drugs.
Never read or send texts while driving.
Follow the speed limit and keep a safe distance between your car and the cars ahead of you.
Use long-life smoke alarms if possible. These alarms use lithium batteries and last longer than regular smoke alarms. They also have a “hush button” so you can stop the alarm quickly if there’s a false alarm.
If you use regular smoke alarms, replace the batteries every year. To help you remember, change your smoke alarm batteries when you change your clock back in the fall from daylight saving time.
Follow these other tips on smoke alarms:
Test your smoke alarms once a month by pushing the test button.
Put smoke alarms on every floor of your home and near places where people sleep.
Don’t forget to put a smoke alarm in the basement.
Replace your smoke alarm if it doesn’t work when tested or if it’s more than 10 years old.
Dust or vacuum smoke alarms when you change the batteries.
Never disable or take down smoke alarms. If an alarm goes off because you are cooking, use the hush button, open a window, or fan the alarm with a towel to clear the air.
Make a fire escape plan for your home. Make a fire escape plan to get out of your home quickly in an emergency. Be sure your plan includes a safe place away from the house where everyone can meet.
Play safely.
Make sure your child wears a helmet during activities like riding a bike or skateboarding. Use helmets and other safety gear to help protect your child’s head, face, wrists, elbows, and knees.
At the playground, check for soft landing spots made of mulch, sand, or rubber mats under swings, slides, and climbers. Just grass or dirt is not enough to prevent injuries from falling.