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Injuries from falling down are common for all age groups, but one year
olds have the highest rate of falls requiring medical attention. In 1986,
300 children and adolescents died from falling. Each year, one out of
every ten children (1-3 years old) will receive medical treatment for
or evaluation of a fall.
Of falls
in the young age group, one out of eight are due to stairs while the rest
are falling from one surface to another.
In order
to reduce injuries due to falls, families should:
- NOT use
baby walkers
- NOT leave
an infant unsupervised on a counter, table, bed (even if they have "never
rolled over before" because that may turn out to be their first
time rolling and falling)
- Install
gates to prevent access to staircases once your child is 6 months old
- Choose
safe playgroundequipment and install it where the ground is soft (over
sand or grass -- NOT over concrete or clay)
- Require
children to wear helmets and protective clothes when using bikes, skateboards,
scooters, etc...
- Use side
rails on bunk beds
- NEVER
allow a child to ride in the back of a pickup truck
Reference:
Oski, F. Principles and Practices of Pediatrics. 2nd edition, 1994.
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