8 Water Safety Tips that Could Save Your Child’s Life

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Two of my worst fears as a parent include my children drowning or being hit by a car in a parking lot. I’ll never forget the time my daughters and I were walking through a Chick-fil-a parking lot and a car almost backed into my daughters. Luckily, I always make them hold my hands , so I was able to pull them from the car’s harm. Both situations tragic and both avoidable with the right information.

Drowning is the leading cause of injury death among children aged 1–4 years, and while swimming pools are a major risk, not all deaths occur in or around a pool. There are many potential risks for drowning in the average home. Parents with young children should regularly conduct a home water safety audit to determine where the risks are in their home and what they can do to better protect their children. The United States Swim School Association, the preeminent swim school organization in the country, has created a guide for parents to follow when conducting an audit.

Home Water Safety Audit Tips

  1. When performing a water safety audit in your home, first create a list of each room inside your

home and include garages, sheds, front yard and back yard, and other structures on your property

as rooms so you can check them off your list as you survey each area.

2. Look for common risk factors found in the average home in each room including buckets, diaper

pails, toilets, ice chests/coolers, hot tubs, spas and whirlpools, ditches and post holes, wells,

ponds and fountains.

3. Identify unique risks in each area of your home and list them under that room. For example:

  • Kitchen – dishes are left soaking in a sink filled with soap and water overnight.
  • Laundry room – the utility sink has a bucket sitting in it with a few inches of water leftover from cleaning the floors.
  • Back yard – old five gallon buckets were left sitting upright behind the shed and could collect rainwater.
  • Bathroom – the bathtub doesn’t drain properly and sometimes water can be left sitting in it for over an hour after it is used.
  • Front yard – a decorative fountain could be a risk when the kids play outside.

4. Fill your bathtub with the amount of water normally used during bathing and use a stopwatch to time how long it takes to drain. Never leave the bathroom unsupervised after a bath until that amount of time has passed.

5. Create a plan for correcting or mitigating risks in your home including toilet lid locks, pool fences and other barriers.

6. To remind yourself to change habits like soaking dishes in the kitchen sink over night, post a note next to the sink.

7. Correct any issues in the home like slow draining sinks or bath tubs, improperly stored buckets or containers, children’s play pools, etc. Hire a plumber to fix drains if you do not have the expertise and always store buckets or containers upside down so water cannot collect in them.

8. For risks installed in your home landscaping including fountains, fishponds, ditches, etc. consider putting up barriers such as these wood fence options to block children from falling into them and carefully supervise children playing outside.

In addition to surveying the home for potential drowning risks, parents should also know how to react to a drowning situation by learning CPR and keeping up to date with certifications. You may never know when you might need it, and if your child or any other children under your care ever do need CPR, then following the cardiac chain of survival, that you may have learnt during your training, will help to make a significant difference in being able to get the heart working again. It could help to save a life, so keeping up to date with the practices of CPR could be so important to their outcome.

To find a USSSA affiliated swim school near you, or for details on becoming a member of the nation’s leading swim school organization visit: https://www.usswimschools.org.

Detroit Mommies Expert Contributor
Courtney is the traveling mom! She has 3 girls and is the founder of Detroit Mommies and currently lives in Florida. You can follow her on Twitter @courtneyRVL.
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DSP
DSP
1 year ago

Thank you for sharing such important information. Summer is coming and the water safety is becoming even more relevant. Parents who have a swimming pool in the backyard should be especially attentive.
On average, there were about 400 reported pool/spa drowning deaths among children younger than age 15 each year, according to new CPSC data. Three-quarters of those deaths involved children younger than 5, and 83% of those occurred in residential pools.