Did
you know that hundreds of children younger than 1 year die every year in the United
States because of injuries most of which could be prevented?
Often,
injuries happen because parents are not aware of what their children can do. Children
learn fast, and before you know it, your child will be wiggling
off a bed or reaching for your cup of hot coffee.
Car
Injuries
Car
crashes are a great threat to your child's life and health. Most injuries
and deaths from car crashes can be prevented by the use of car safety seats.
Your child, besides being much safer in a car safety seat, will behave better,
so you can pay attention to your driving. Make your newborn's first ride home
from the hospital a safe one in a car safety seat. Your infant should ride
in the back seat in a rear-facing car seat.
Make
certain that your baby's car seat is installed correctly. Read and follow the
instructions that come with the car safety seat and the sections in the owners'
manual of your car on using car safety seats correctly. Use the car safety seat
EVERY time your child is in a car.
NEVER
put an infant in the front seat of a car with a passsenger air bag.
Falls
Babies
wiggle and move and push against things with their feet soon
after they are born. Even these very first movements can result in a fall. As
your baby grows and is able to roll over, he or she may fall off of things unless
protected. Do not leave your baby alone
on changing tables, beds, sofas, or chairs. Put
your baby in a safe place such as a crib or playpen when you cannot
hold him.
Your baby may be
able to crawl as early as 6 months. Use gates on stairways
and close doors to keep your baby out of rooms where he or she might
get hurt. Install operable window guards
on all windows above the first floor.
Do
not use a baby walker. Your baby may tip the walker
over, fall out of it, or fall down stairs and seriously injure
his head. Baby walkers let children get to places where they can
pull heavy objects or hot food on themselves.
If
your child has a serious fall or does not act normally after a fall, call your
doctor.
Burns
At 3 to 5 months, babies will wave their fists and grab at things.
NEVER carry your baby and hot liquids,
such as coffee, or foods at the same time. Your baby
can get burned. You can't handle both! To protect your child from
tap water scalds, the hottest temperature at the faucet should
be no more than 120°F. In
many cases you can adjust your hot water heater.
If
your baby gets burned, immediately put the burned area in cold
water. Keep the burned area in cold water for a few minutes
to cool it off. Then cover the burn loosely with a dry bandage
or clean cloth and call your doctor.
To protect your baby
from house fires, be sure you have a working smoke alarm on
every level of your home, especially in furnance and sleeping
areas. Test the alarms every month. It is best to use smoke
alarms that use long-life batteries, but if you do not, change
the batteries at least once a year.
Choking
and Suffocation
Babies explore their environment by putting anything
and everything into their mouths. NEVER leave small objects
in your baby's reach, even for a moment. NEVER feed your baby hard
pieces of food such as chunks of raw carrots, apples, hot dogs, grapes, peanuts,
and popcorn. Cut all the foods you feed your baby into thin pieces to prevent
choking. Be prepared if your baby starts to choke. Ask
your doctor to recommend the steps you need to know. Learn how to save the life
of a choking child.
To
prevent possible suffocation and reduce the risk of sudden infant death syndrome
(SIDS), your baby should always sleep on his or her back.
NEVER put your baby on a water bed, bean bag, or anything that is soft enough
to cover the face and block air to the nose and mouth.
Plastic
wrappers and bags form a tight seal if placed over the mouth and nose
and may suffocate your child. Keep them away from your baby.