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How to Childproof Your Home
Unintentional injury is the No. 1 killer of children in the U.S. But
prevention can eliminate almost all of these injuries.
Here are some childproofing steps to keep your children safe at home.
Childproofing the Kitchen
- Install safety latches on all cabinets and drawers to keep
children from potentially poisonous household products.
- Use the stove's back burners and turn pot handles toward the back of
the stove to keep hot pots and pans out of reach of children.
- Keep kitchenware and appliances out of reach and away from the edge
of counters and tables.
- Put visual reminders like the Mr. Yuk stickers from poison
prevention centers on potential poisonous or hazardous items.
Childproofing the Bathroom
- Install safety latches on cabinets and drawers to keep children from
potentially poisonous household products.
- Install toilet locks to keep toilet lids closed. Children are more
top-heavy than adults and can lean and fall into a toilet easily. They also can
drown in just one inch of water.
- Install anti-scalding devices on faucets and shower heads to prevent
burns. Also set the water heater thermostat to 120 degrees. It takes just three
seconds for a child to sustain a third-degree burn from water at 140
degrees.
- Unplug hair dryers and electric rollers after use to prevent
electrocution from contact with water in the bathroom. Also keep them away from
curious children to prevent burns.
- Cover unused electrical outlets with outlet protectors or safety
caps. Make sure outlets in the bathroom and kitchen -- or near any water
source -- are updated with ground fault circuit interrupters (GFCIs), which
turn off electricity if appliances fall into water. For outlets in use,
especially those low to the ground, there are devices which make it difficult
to pull out plugs.
Childproofing Around the House
- Use safety gates at the top and bottom of stairs and in the doorways
of rooms with hazards. Gates with expanding pressure bars should be placed away
from baby.
- Use doorknob covers to keep children away from rooms and other areas
with hazards, such as swimming pools. Be careful, though, that these devices
are easy for adults to use in case of emergency.
- Put corner and edge bumpers on furniture and other items like a
fireplace hearth to protect against injury.
- Place furniture away from high windows so children won't climb onto
windowsills. Screens aren't strong enough to keep children from falling through
windows.
- Make sure window blinds do not have looped cords -- they can be
strangulation hazards for children. Blinds, shades, and draperies purchased
before 2001 should be repaired or replaced. Also, always lock blinds into
position whether they are all the way up or down.
- Remove free-falling lids from toy chests, which should have a lid
that stays open or a very light, removable one.
- Prevent furniture from tipping by securing bookcases, shelving, and
heavy furniture to walls with brackets and anchors. When storing items, put
heavier items on bottom shelves and in bottom drawers.
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