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beware: They are dangerous if not monitored properly.
You
must be aware of the potentially hazardous properties of a
pool. An accessible pool is more dangerous for your toddler
than a loaded gun laying out on your coffee table. In a child's
hands eventually it will go off! But unlike the gun going
off and where the bullet will strike, the outcome with a toddler
falling into a pool undetected is almost certain.
Just
how serious is the problem? Drowning is the number one cause
of death for children under five in Florida, Arizona, and
California with a ranking of number two for over a dozen other
states. For every drowning there are eleven near drowning
incidents, according to government statistics; many of which
result in totally disabling brain damage.
The
majority of the parents involved were responsible people who
thought it could never happen to their family. They were careful
and had close supervision over their children. Many were in
good income brackets, educated, and could afford nice homes
with pools in family oriented communities. So we are literally
talking about people who could live next door to you.
If
drowning were a disease it truly would be referred to as an
epidemic with all the public attention and awareness possible
focused on an epidemic of such proportion.
A
study conducted by the U.S. Consumer Product Safety Commission
to find out how child drowning incidents occur indicates that
SUPERVISION CAN AND DOES FAIL.
The
investigation by the Commission was directed at children under
age five in Arizona, California, and Florida who had drown
in home swimming pools. The results might help you to better
understand why drowning is still the number one killer for
three states and stands at number two for the nation:
Who
was in charge of supervision at the time of drowning?
69
percent of the accidents occurred while one or both parents
were responsible for supervision.
10 percent were adults other than the parents.
14 percent were sitters.
7 percent siblings
What was the location of the pool drowning?
65
percent were in a pool owned by the child's family.
22 percent at a relatives
11 percent happened at a neighbor's.
Drowning happens quickly and without warning. There is no
cry for help.
77
percent of the children had been seen 5 minutes or less before
being missed and subsequently discovered in the pool.
Where
were they last seen?
46
percent WERE LAST SEEN IN THE HOUSE prior to being found in
the pool. Of these, 15 percent were thought to be sleeping.
23 percent were last seen in the yard, porch or patio, not
in the pool area. That's a total of 69 percent that were thought
not to be in the pool area.
31 percent were last seen in the pool or pool area.
What activity was the person responsible for supervision involved
in at the time of drowning?
39
percent were doing chores.
18 percent socializing.
9 percent were busy on the telephone.
The suddenness of this type of accident and the results it
yields is devastating to anyone it touches. When you think
pool, think hard core. Even if this is not your personality,
you must be an absolute dictator. Let your children know without
any doubts, that is your way or none at all.
LAYERS
OF PROTECTION
Supervision
is always your primary layer of protection, but as the study
shows, 69 percent of the drowning incidents occurred when
parental supervision failed and there were not other "backup
layers" in use.
- Access
doors to the pool area with high locks are a secondary layer
of protection.
- Alarms
on access doors is another layer of protection.
-
A pool safety barrier (fence) separating the pool from your
home and all access doors and entrances is one more layer
of protection.
-
Water survival training for a child when he is capable of
crawling or walking to the pool.
- CPR
and your knowledge of rescue techniques are a final layer
of protection should there be an accident.
The goal, with instituted layers of protection, is to come
as close to a "fail safe" system of preventing
drowning incidents as possible. Meaning that if there is
a momentary lapse of supervision for whatever reason, we
have several backup systems in place.
All
must fail before a drowning can take place. A door has been
left unlocked or open, the alarm system or device for the
door has been turned off, the pool safety barrier has been
left open, your child does enter the water, panics and does
not attempt to utilize survival swim training, CPR is administered
too late to save the child.
THERE
CAN BE NO COMPROMISE ON POOL SAFETY. YOU ARE DEALING, LITERALLY,
WITH A LIFE AND DEATH SITUATION.
Set
down definite pool rules covering its use and more importantly,
when it is not in use. We all have a tendency to give a little
leeway on this or that with our children, but not when it
comes to the pool.
Any
door leading to the pool area should be kept locked.
Even
if your home is equipped with an alarm system that will beep
when perimeter doors are opened, install simple contact alarms
on the more often used doors as a further safeguard. Pool
Guard makes an excellent alarm designed strictly for access
doors to the pool area. This type of alarm must have the button
pushed whenever the door is opened and has a delay feature
to keep if from sounding off for seven seconds for entering
from the inside. It is particularly useful if you have older
children who open doors to the pool area. Sliding glass doors
should be locked at the top in addition to other locks. In
two thirds of the drowning cases studied where children were
thought to be in the home, sliding glass doors were either
left open or opened by the toddler.
If
you own a pool this is a must! Install a protective safety
barrier or pool fence that will eliminate access to the
pool for young children and pets.
Floating
pool alarm devices with remote alarms sounding in the home
can alert you to a child falling into the pool. The pool surface,
however, must be disturbed enough by the fall so as to set
off the alarm. Since these alarms do work off a disturbance
to the surface of the pool; your child could quietly walk
down the steps, go under, drown, and never disturb the alarm
or set it off!!! They are quite inexpensive (around $100)
and better than nothing at all since they do detect some accidental
falls if adjusted and placed properly. Alarm batteries and
function should be checked often to increase the safety margin
and effectiveness of this type of device. If this is your
choice of protection; be sure the model you purchase has a
remote alarm that will sound in the house and a local alarm
that will also alert someone near the pool area.
Another
type of alarm on the market is designed to detect motion in
the pool area with an infrared beam. These alarms are independent
of your burglar alarm systems and are designed to be easily
mounted outside without doing electrical work and have a remote
alarm in the home that can be plugged into any electrical
outlet. Optek is one manufacturer of this type of alarm.
Have
your toddler trained for pool survival when he is able to
crawl or walk to your pool.
This
is introductory training to the water that is not intended
to actually teach him to swim, but more to provide the toddler
with the necessary skills to help survive an accidental fall
into the pool. He should be taught to negotiate to a wall
or steps and know how to get out. His final lesson might include
his being knocked unexpectedly into the pool fully clothed.
Do not be alarmed, the child's reaction is being monitored
to help determine if the lessons have been effective by using
this simulated "panic situation". This type of survival
training can usually be very effective after just a week of
daily lessons. From our own experience with both methods and
other parents we have spoken with, this method is considerably
less traumatic than other methods.
Another
method of water survival training is to teach the child to
roll over and float on his back. It also is effective and
has been taught successfully for many years. Be certain that
he is also taught how to get to the side of the pool and hang
on or get out in addition to learning to roll over and float.
You
can determine which method will best suit your needs and the
situation.
All
types of survival swim instruction must be reintroduced to
the toddler after a period of not being in the pool; as in
over the winter months.
Whichever
way you go, do not be lulled into thinking that your child
can have open access to the pool area. Remember, this is just
one layer of protection.
Every
layer of protection possible must be in force at all times
or the system is compromised.
If
you have read or been told that your child cannot be taught
water survival until age three because he is incapable of
learning at an earlier age, might get ear infections, that
it "leads to a false sense of security for the parent",
or that such training is ineffective "because 55 percent
of toddlers who drown had received survival swim training,"
please think for yourself!
Your
child can be taught survival swimming and will retain it during
water active months with practice.
If
you do not have your child in the water over the winter months,
particularly a child under age 3 years, he will require a
refresher to "remember" what was learned the summer
before. This will usually take only a few days to accomplish
and then you can proceed on to have him learn additional techniques
or start actual swimming lessons.
Yes,
a large percentage of children who have drown did have survival
swim training, what the statistics cannot show you is how
many have survived a fall into the pool because of this training
(many adults who drown could also swim). As to the "false
sense of security", most parents will not even leave
a toddler alone in a bathtub much less knowingly let their
child near the pool unsupervised. U.S. Consumer Product Safety
Commission's study revealed that 75 percent of the victims
of drowning were among 12 and 35 months of age. For these
children, 3 years old will never come.
Take
the time to learn CPR and accident procedures. If not your
own child, you may be able to save someone else's. Many local
hospitals have programs for this type of training.
Do
not leave a toddler or young children in the pool or pool
area without adult supervision. Older children are not always
as sensitive to the dangers of drowning when it applies to
others.
A
mother told us that she was scolding an older brother (6 years
old), as she snatched her coughing 18 months old out of the
pool where he had walked off the steps while she was away
for a moment. His answer was innocent "But I could see
his eyes were open and he wasn't crying." Hope the point
has been made.
Never
go into the house to answer the telephone and leave a child
unattended in the pool area. Numerous drowning incidents are
associated with the answering of a telephone in the house
while the pool was in use by children.
A
telephone installed at the pool area or the presence of a
remote unit, on the other hand, could prove to be an invaluable
aid in the event of an accident.
Do
not leave objects in the pool that could attract your child.
Children who would not normally go near a pool because of
fear may not even think about the water if they are in pursuit
of a favorite toy in the pool.
"Staging
platforms", such as tables and chairs, should not be
kept near the pool fence.
Allowing
the pool area to be used as a play area is as bad as letting
young children play in a busy street or with poisonous chemicals.
Isolating the pool area to be used for swimming only is the
most essential concept of drowning prevention.
If
you miss your child always check the pool first, even if access
is thought to be restricted, then look elsewhere.
In
a drowning accident seconds can make the difference between
death, recovery, or just survival.
KEEP
THEM SAFE AND PLAY BY THE RULES
SWIMMING
POOL FENCING
Removable
safety fencing has proven, over the past thirty years,
to be the most practical and effective barrier against pool
drowning short of putting up a permanent rail fence.
The
concept is simple. Isolate the pool from your home and eliminate
all access to the water by a toddler. For the pool to be truly
isolated and the barriers serve effectively, there must not
be a reason to open the pool fence other than to use or service
the pool itself. That means not having to open the pool fence
to go out a screen enclosure door or into your backyard. These
areas should be accessible to you without opening the swimming
pool fence. The more times a fence is opened, for a reason
other than to use the pool, the greater the possibility that
it will be left open for whatever reason.
Pool
fence is constructed of see through, polyester mesh mounted
on aluminum or fiberglass support poles. The fence is placed
into aluminum or plastic sleeves installed into your deck
surface. The bottom border of the fence material should be
flush to your deck so as to prevent a child from pushing under.
The basic principal that keeps pool fence in place is bilateral
tension and the fence should be checked periodically to insure
that you have benefit of its full function.
A
standard pool fence is removable in approximately twelve foot
sections. Each section can easily be rolled up and weighs
only eleven pounds. The average one hundred foot fence can
be removed in less than fifteen minutes and be put back up
in approximately the same amount of time. Most fences, however,
are never taken down until children in the home are old enough
not to require this safe guard any longer.
Having
a party with young children present? Think twice
about removing the fence. Family gatherings and social affairs
contribute to distraction and drowning accidents involving
young children. So that the pool fence does not have to be
removed for day to day use of the pool, a "gate"
section is provided at the steps or another convenient location.
A pool fence "gate" is formed by two connecting
sections that can be opened by an adult. Extra sleeves are
placed into the deck at this point to act as pole holders
when the "gate" is open.
SELF-CLOSING,
SELF-LOCKING GATES: Self-closing, self-latching gates
are automatic and provide better protection if there are folks
in the house that can't remember to close a gate behind them.
Because it does not have to be physically closed or locked
by the user it is a more practical option when there are older
children in the home who have unsupervised access to the swimming
pool . A self-closing gate and its lock are mechanical devices
located outside and subject to corrosion, wear from use, misalignment,
and mechanical failure. Extra care must be taken to insure
that the gate is functioning properly. Be sure that your gate
is always installed to swing out or away from the pool or
water.
How
high should your pool fence be? Pool fence ranges
from 3 1/2 feet to 5 feet high. For an average toddler we
recommend you look at the 4 foot height. A child capable of
climbing a 4 foot high fence will most likely also be able
to go over 5 feet. It's just a longer fall down the other
side. A child with this kind of capability should already
be well into a swimming program.
We
talk to parents moving into a home with a pool for the first
time who are nervous about a six year old around the pool
accidentally falling in. Since a six year old can go over
any height fence and the fence is being installed to basically
keep them from just falling into the pool by accident, we
would recommend a shorter height like 3 1/2 feet as long as
this is the only child in the household.
How
far apart should the fence support poles be? Support
poles provide both tension and strength for the fence, so
the less distance apart the better. We normally recommend
30 inches as a standard if you are making any turns with the
fence at all. For straight runs, like across a patio, 36 inch
pole spacing should be adequate.
What
mesh material is best? The majority of pool fence
manufacturers today use polyester mesh with vinyl coating.
It is a continuous basket weave construction and is the strongest
method today for manufacturing pool fence. The smooth vinyl
coatings are mildew resistant and allow easy cleaning of the
finished product, unlike the grainy finishes of older style
dipped interlocking nylon products that had a tendency to
trap both growths and dirt. The newer polyester meshes are
also much more resistant to punctures and are virtually impossible
for even an adult to rip.
Should
the mesh be bordered? To be a finished product your
pool fence mesh should also be bordered on all four sides
with vinyl border. Not only does this provide a finished look
to your fence but also prevents unraveling of the mesh itself.
Check the border material to insure that it has visible reinforcing
built into the vinyl to provide additional strength to the
fence and eliminate sagging over time.
Remember,
the fence should block off all access from the home to the
pool. Half way measures here are like playing "Russian
Roulette". The only time the fence should be opened is
when you are using the pool. Children learn quickly to operate
door locks and open doors that have not been locked. Your
last layer of protection to the pool should be your pool fence.
Do
not forget your "fail safe" minimum of five layers
of protection against drowning.
Adult
supervision, locked doors, perimeter door alarms, the pool
fence, and swimming lessons. All five must fail before your
child can drown in your pool.
Learn
even more about your primary layer of protection, removable
mesh pool fence, by clicking here.
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