Transcript Slide 1

Injury prevention in the home
environment for children and
young people
Effective interventions
Presented by Louise Woodfine, National Public Health Service for Wales
Erlas Centre, Wrexham
26.06.2009
Preventing childhood injuries
A combination of factors are required to prevent children sustaining injuries in the home.
Environment
Improvement in planning and design results in safer homes and leisure areas. Adaptations
such as fireguards and stair-gates help to make the home a safer environment.
Education
This involves increasing the awareness of the risk of accidents in a variety of settings and
providing information on ways of minimising these risks.
Empowerment
Local consultation and community involvement can generate a strong sense of
commitment and ownership. Accident prevention initiatives, which have been influenced
by the community, are more likely to reflect local need and therefore encourage greater
commitment.
Enforcement
There is legislation which relates to child safety. These regulations ensure that the
products we buy meet a reasonable level of safety performance and that new dwellings
meet an acceptable level of safety.
Interventions in the Home Environment
General
Product Design
Injury Reduction
Some Evidence
Safety Devices
Injury Reduction
Some Evidence
Smoke detector promotion programmes
Behaviour Change/Injury Reduction
Good Evidence
Tap Water Temperature Reduction
Behaviour Change/Injury Reduction
Some Evidence
Parent and Child Education
Behaviour Change
Some Evidence
Child Resistant Packaging
Injury Reduction
Good Evidence
Parent Education
Behaviour Change
Some Evidence
Window Bars (Education and environmental
modification and Legislation)
Behaviour Change/Injury Reduction
Reasonable Evidence
Parent Education
Behaviour Change
Reasonable Evidence
Behaviour Change
Reasonable Evidence
Burns and Scalds
Poisoning
Falls Prevention
General Campaigns
Parent Education on Hazard Reduction
Evidence suggests that the implementation of the following
programmes would help to prevent injury and deaths of children
and young people in Wales.
Following identification of families in need, through contact with services such as:
• Health Visitor
• Midwife
• Communities First Team
• Pre School provision
• Flying Start
• Community Nurses
• Social work teams
Vulnerable families should receive the following safety equipment:
• Smoke alarms (where it does not currently happen)
• Thermostatic mixing value to prevent bath scalds
• Fireguards
• Appropriate safety gates
• Window restrictors
• 4 point safety harness for highchairs
•
Cupboard/drawer restrictors
Royal Society for the Prevention of Accidents
The Royal Society for the Prevention of
Accidents (RoSPA) website provides a
summary of guidance and advice for
preventing childhood injuries in the home.
www.rospa.co.uk/homesafety/advice/child/accidents.htm#injuries
Safety and Child Development
Safety and child development
Children differ in their rate of development but the information below is a guide to development stages.
Age
Development
Advice
0-6 months
Wriggle and Kick, grasp, suck, roll over
Do not leave on a raised surface
6-12 months
Stand, Sit, Crawl, put things in mouth.
Keep small objects and dangerous
substances out of reach
1-2 years
Move about, reach things high up, find hidden
objects, walk and climb.
Never leave alone, place hot drinks out
of reach, use a fireguard and stairgates.
2-3 years
Be adventurous, climb higher, pull and twist
things, watch and copy.
Place matches and lighters out of reach.
Be a good role model. Be watchful.
3-4 years
Use grown-up things, be helpful, understand
instructions, be adventurous, explore, walk
downstairs alone
Continue to be a good role model, keep
being watchful but start safety training.
4-5 years
Play exciting games, can be independent, ride a
bike, enjoy stories
They can actually plan to do things and
carry it out. Rules are very important to
them, as long as everybody keeps the
same ones. They enjoy learning.
Continue safety training.
Source: RoSPA
Causes of injuries
Falls
•
Falls are the most common causes of accidents in the home; they account for 44% of all children’s
accidents.
•
Most falls involve tripping over on the same level. However, the most serious consequences result
from falls between two levels.
Prevention
•Fit a safety gate at the top and bottom of stairs
•Never leave tripping hazards on the stairs.
•Stairs should be carefully maintained – damaged or worn carpet should be repaired or removed.
•Make sure balustrades are strong and do not have any footholds for climbing.
•Stairs should always be well lit.
•Fit child resistant window locks but make sure you can get out easily in an emergency.
•Do not put anything under the window that can be climbed on.
•Furniture and tall kitchen appliances, at risk from being pulled over, should be secured to the
wall.
Fires
• Domestic fires pose one of the greatest risks to children. Children playing with matches
and lighters frequently start house fires – 46% of all fatal accidents to children are in
house fires.
Prevention
•Keep matches and lighters out of sight and reach of children.
•Always use a fireguard and secure it to the wall.
•Extinguish and dispose of cigarettes properly.
•Have an escape route planned, and practise it, in case of fire.
•Fit a smoke alarm and check it regularly.
•The incidence of burns and scalds in young children is much higher than that of older
children and adults.
Scalds & burns
Many of the children who attend A&E with a burn or scald are referred on for further hospital
treatment.
Hot drinks cause most scalds to children under the age of 5. A child’s skin is much more sensitive
than an an adult’s and a hot drink can still scald a child 15 minutes after being made. Young children
are also vulnerable to sunburn.
Hot bath water is responsible for the highest number of fatal and severe scalding injuries among
children.
Children can also suffer burns after contact with open fires, a cooker, irons, curling tongs and hair
straighteners, cigarettes, matches, cigarette lighters and many other hot surfaces.
Prevention
•Never hold a hot drink and a child at the same time.
•Never leave young children alone in the bathroom.
•Put hot drinks out of reach and away from the edges of tables and worktops.
•Encourage the use of a coiled flex or a cordless kettle.
•Keep small children out of the kitchen whenever possible.
•Run the domestic hot water system at 46C or fit a thermostatic mixing valve to taps.
•When running a bath turn the cold water on first and always test the water temperature with your
elbow before letting a child get into the bath or shower.
•Always use rear hotplates and turn the panhandles away from the front of the cooker.
•Keep hot irons, curling tongs and hair straighteners out of reach even when cooling down.
Glass related accidents
The increase use of glass in the home has led to more glass related accidents. Every year
children die following an accident with architectural glass. Many children are also injured
when glass tumblers and bottles break.
Prevention
•Use safety glass in all replacement windows and doors.
•Make existing glass safer by applying shatter resistant film.
•Always clear up broken glass quickly and dispose of it safely.
•Buy a greenhouse or cold frame with special safety glazing features or isolate with fencing.
Poisoning
Most poisoning accidents involve medicine, household products and cosmetics.
Prevention
•Keep medicines and chemicals out of sight and reach of children, preferably in a locked cupboard.
•Buy products in child resistant containers when possible.
•Always store chemicals in their original containers.
•Dispose of unwanted medicines and chemicals safely.
•Avoid buying plants with poisonous leave or berries or those that irritate the skin.
Suffocating and choking
Children can swallow, inhale or choke on items such as small toys, peanuts and marbles.
Prevention
•Choose toys appropriate to the age of the child.
•Ensure that small objects such as marbles and peanuts and small toys are kept out of reach of children
under 3 years.
•Encourage older children to keep their toys away from their younger playmates.
•Pull chords on curtains and blinds should be kept short and kept out of reach.
•Keep animals, especially cats, out of the bedroom and use a net on the pram.
Drowning
Children can drown in less than 3cm of water.
Prevention
•Never leave children or babies in the bath unsupervised, even for a moment.
•Never leave uncovered bowls or buckets of water around the home.
•Paddling pools should be emptied and stored away when not in use.
•Garden ponds should be filled in while children are small or securely fenced off.
Good Practice for general child home safety
Home safety counselling (addressing issues such as using window bars, stair gates,
other home safety equipment and not using baby walkers, bath seats and other injury
hazard producing equipment)
Education
Home based social support, such as home visiting programmes for new mothers
Education
Individual-led education/counselling on unintentional childhood injury prevention in
the clinical setting
Education
Good Practice for fall prevention in children
Window safety mechanisms to prevent children from opening windows, such as bars
and position locking devices
Engineering
Stair gates at the top of stairs in households with small children
Enforcement
Surfacing materials such as sand or wood chips to a depth of 23-31cm under
playground equipment. Optimal equipment height to reduce risk of head injury is 1.5m
Enforcement
Legislation banning baby walkers OR requiring modification to remove the mobility
issue
Enforcement
Enforcement of standards requiring safe depth of specified types of surfacing
materials under playground equipment and regular maintenance of those materials
Enforcement
Education programmes encouraging use of fall prevention safety devices such as
window safety mechanisms to prevent children from opening windows down stairs
Education
Good Practice for burn and scald prevention in children
Product modification, specifically child resistant cigarette lighters and selfextinguishing cigarettes
Engineering
Legislation requiring a safe pre-set temperature for all water heaters
Enforcement
Legislation requiring installation of smoke detectors in all new and existing
housing, combined with multi-factorial community campaigns and reduced price
coupons
Enforcement
Legislation regulating flammability of sleepwear
Enforcement
Smoke detector give away programmes targeting high risk neighbourhoods and
multi faceted community campaigns with specific objective of installation of
working smoke detectors
Education
Education/Advocacy campaigns around fireworks are useful as supplemental
efforts and can be used to build support for legislation
Education
Fire safety skills training to increase knowledge and behaviour of both children
and parents
Education
Good practice for poisoning prevention in children
Secure storage for poisons.
Engineering
Legislation for child resistant packaging
Enforcement
Poison control centres with education of public regarding the use of centre
Education
Good practice for choking/strangulation prevention in children
Product modification of existing entrapment hazards such as crib/cot design
and enforcement through legislation
Enforcement
Product banning of unsafe products through legislation
Enforcement
Legislation requiring product warning labels to include an explanation of the
specific hazard
Enforcement
Acknowledgements
• Claire Jones, Health Information Analysis
Team, NPHS
• Nathan Lester, Health Information Analysis
Team, NPHS
For further information contact:
[email protected]
END