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KIDS AND HOT CARS TURN INTO TRAGEDY : “Look Before You Lock”

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June 1,2018

the staff of the Ridgewood blog

Ridgewood NJ, The Ridgewood Health Department and the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration want you to know that a child’s body temperature can rise up to five times faster than an adult’s. Heatstroke begins when the core body temperature reaches around 104 degrees; death can follow in a child when that temperature reaches 107 degrees.
Even with moderate temperatures outside, the inside of a car can heat up to well above 110 degrees in minutes. But with summer upon us, and daytime temperatures in many areas across the country shooting well above 90 degrees, vehicles will heat up even faster.
That makes it vitally important to be aware of the dangers that vehicles—especially hot ones—pose to children, because tragedies can, and do, happen.
In fact, from 1998-2017, 718 children across the nation died due to heatstroke in a hot vehicle. In 2017, 18 children have died due to vehicular heatstroke, and that number continues to climb. On average, a child dies every 10 days from vehicular heatstroke, with an average of 37 children per year. Such deaths are the leading cause of non-crash-related fatalities for children 14 and younger. Just as tragic, between 1998-2016, over half (54%) of the child heatstroke deaths were because the child was forgotten in the vehicle by a distracted parent or caregiver.
No parent ever thinks that it can happen to them, but a quietly sleeping child in the back seat can be forgotten, even by a great parent. And part-time caregivers who are unaccustomed to regularly transporting children can be especially prone to forgetting.
That’s why all adults should always remember to “Look Before You Lock” to make sure there are no children left in the vehicle. Some other simple reminders include:
• Write a reminder note about the child and put it on the car door or dashboard to see it when you leave the vehicle.
• Set a reminder on your cell phone to alert you to check that you dropped your child off at daycare.
• Place a shoe, purse, briefcase, or cell phone next to the child’s car seat to remind yourself that your child is in the car.
• Keep a familiar object, like a stuffed toy, in your child’s car seat. When you remove it to buckle up your child, place the object in the front seat. It will serve as a reminder to always check the back seat for your child.
• Never let kids play in an unattended vehicle or leave a child alone in a car, even if you leave the windows partly open or the air conditioning on—even for just a few minutes. Also, keep car keys away from where children can reach them.
If you are not a parent or caregiver, you still have an important role to play. If you happen to see a child alone in a hot vehicle, make sure the child is okay and responsive. If the child appears to be okay, quickly do everything you can to locate the parents.
If the child is not responsive or appears to be in distress, call 911 immediately and follow their directions. When the child is out of the vehicle, cool the child rapidly (not with an ice bath, but by spraying with cool water).
Sometimes bystanders are reluctant to get involved; surveys suggest that 63 percent of adults just assume the parents will be right back. But what if they aren’t?
Bystanders should know that states have “Good Samaritan” laws that protect them from lawsuits for helping a person in an emergency. So if you happen to see a child alone in a hot car, do not hesitate— please act!
We need parents, caregivers and bystanders all working together to help end these tragic heatstroke deaths—because hot cars kill children.
Visit www.safercar.gov/heatstroke for more information. #heatstrokekills #checkforbaby

4 thoughts on “KIDS AND HOT CARS TURN INTO TRAGEDY : “Look Before You Lock”

  1. there has to be some technology available including back seat motion detectors after 5 minutes that can open the windows and sound the car alarm including a baby on board KEY fob that some hoe reminds the parents
    10 minutes after leaving the Geo area of the resting car to help save many lives.

    if we can design driverless cars we should be able to start with new car technology with no excuses for infant and pet deaths due locked in car causes

  2. “there has to be some technology available…”
    .
    Good idea… let’s remove all parenting responsibilities from parents and excuse their behavior by creating yet another nanny technology which will not work..
    .
    Better yet, if you REALLY want to save lives, let’s ban ALL motor vehicles… or maybe ban all windows.
    Yeah, that sounds about right…
    ‘cuz remember… its all good IF YOU CAN SAVE JUST ONE LIFE
    .

  3. 12:40

    we can examine the guilty parties who pay the price of guilt of harming their children by a simple mistake once they have recovered in a hospital rather than a morgue by use of technology

    this is nothing different than a fire alarm,or nanny camera or any other childhood monitor,we have back up cameras in cars so what your point,

    people and parents make mistakes..its happens ..let use tech to save some kids and some pets in cars

  4. These parents need to be neutered and have all of their other children taken away.

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