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4/3/19 news article

hot car deaths highest in 20 years

start setting habits today as temperatures begin to rise

In 2018, 51 children died inside hot cars – that’s the highest number of fatalities in 20 years, according to Safe Kids Worldwide. As temperatures begin to get warmer, parents should take a few minutes now to ensure they don’t become a part of this statistic.

create habits

More than half of the deaths from hot cars were children who were ‘forgotten’ by a caregiver. Researchers are now finding how easy it can be, due to two memory systems in your brain.  One regulates habits – long term, ingrained patterns – while the second regulates short term plans. When a person is tired, stressed or functioning outside of their routine, it can be very easy for that short term memory to fail.  Your brain may even create ‘false memories,’ for example, of dropping the child off at daycare. By putting some precautions in place today and making them long term habits, they could save your child.

“When you have the baby in the car, put your cell phone in the back seat, along with your purse or briefcase,” says Abbey Rymarczyk, community relations prevention coordinator at Dayton Children’s Hospital and Safe Kids Greater Dayton coordinator.  “It may seem ridiculous to say you need your cell phone to remind you that your child is in the backseat, but this is about creating a habit that adds an extra layer of protection, if your brain fails you.  It would no longer seem silly if it saves your child.”

minutes matter

Many parents may be tempted to leave a child in a car while they run back into the house or run into the grocery store, but minutes matter in a hot car. Several children have died in hot cars when the outside temperature was just 71 degrees. A car can heat up 19 degrees in just 10 minutes.  Cracked or open windows do nothing to alleviate the heat.  Young children are particularly at risk because their bodies heat up three to five times faster than an adult’s.   When a child’s body gets too hot, organs start to shut down, brain damage occurs and a child can die. Never leave a child alone in a car, no matter the temperature.

no place to play

Toddlers and preschoolers love to explore and play. The car may seem like a great place during a game of hide and seek, or they may love to pretend they are like mom and dad.  Sadly, 29 percent of the children who have died from heatstroke in car became trapped while playing. 

To avoid this, teach children that a car is no place to play. Keep the car doors locked, even if the vehicle is in the garage, which will prevent children from climbing in on their own.

ACT

We can reduce the number of heatstroke deaths and close calls by remembering to ACT.

  • A: Avoid heatstroke-related injury and death by never leaving your child alone in a car, not even for a minute. Make sure to keep your car locked when you’re not in it, so kids don’t get in on their own.
  • C: Create reminders by putting something on the backseat of your car next to your child such as a briefcase, a purse or a cell phone that is needed at your final destination. This is especially important if you’re not following your normal routine.
  • T: Take action. If you see a child alone in a car, call 911. Emergency personnel want you to call. They are trained to respond to these situations. One call could save a life.

 

 

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