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1999 - News Release

Kansas
Department of Health & Environment
Bill Graves, Governor
Clyde D. Graeber, Secretary
For Immediate Release
November 22, 1999
Contact: Jan Stegelman, 785-296-1223
Take Time Out for Safety This Holiday Season
The scene is all to familiar. Frenzied parents busily rushing through packed-to-the-ceiling
aisles searching for the perfect gifts and decorations to celebrate their holiday
festivities. Many parents feel relief when they're done, but they may not realize
that their work has just begun. With all of the decorating, gift-giving and
festivity fanfare, making your holiday safe for children will be the most important
preparation of all.
"It's easy to become caught up in holiday preparations and to overlook
the potential hazards of decorations," says Jan Stegelman of the Kansas
SAFE KIDS Coalition. "Whether you're putting up a Christmas tree or lighting
the Menorah or Kwanza candles, taking simple precautions can help make your
holidays more joyful and safe."
The Kansas SAFE KIDS Coalition recommends the following to keep your holiday
season safe:
Lights and Candles
- Decorate your tree using only UL (Underwriters' Lab Inc.) approved lights
and cords. Inspect lights for exposed or frayed wires, loose connections or
broken sockets. Do not overload extension cords. Use no more than three strings
of lights on one extension cord, and never run an electrical cord under a
carpet. Be sure to secure electrical cords so that children cannot pull them
and topple the tree. Keep toddlers away from electrical fixtures and install
outlet plate covers or large outlet covers on electrical sockets when they
are not in use. Small plastic outlet covers may pose a choking hazard.
- Turn off the tree lights when you go to bed or leave the home.
- Keep burning candles out of children's reach; keep matches and lighters
out of sight and locked away.
- Teach children not to touch burning candles.
- Do not place candles near draperies or anything that might easily catch
fire.
- If you build a fire in the fireplace, use a screen and do not leave young
children unattended in the room. Make sure you put out fires and candles when
you go to bed or leave the home. Do not leave candles unattended.
- Install smoke alarms in your home on every level and in every sleeping
area.
- Test them once a month and replace the batteries at least once
a year. Home fires and home fire-related deaths are more likely
to occur during the cold-weather months.
Christmas Trees
- Look for a fresh tree if you choose to buy a natural tree.
Fresh trees are less likely to catch fire than older trees.
(A safer option is to buy a fire-resistant, artificial tree.)
- Keep your tree in a container full of water and check it daily.
- Use a wide-based stand to make sure the tree is secure and will not fall
over.
- Cover the tree basin with a tree skirt or blanket.
- Keep the tree away from heat sources such as fireplaces, radiators and
heating vents.
- Trim the lower branches to avoid eye injuries to small children.
- Decorate your tree with children in mind. Do not put breakable
ornaments, ornaments with small, detachable parts, ornaments with metal hooks,
or ornaments that look like food or candy on the lower branches where small
children can reach them. Also, make sure tree lights are hung out of reach
of young children.
- Never burn Christmas tree branches, treated wood or wrapping paper in your
fireplace.
- Dispose of your tree promptly after the holidays.
Holiday Foods and Ornaments
- Some foods and objects pose a choking hazard to young children, especially
children
- under age 5. To help prevent unintentional chokings during the holidays:
- Keep round, hard foods and candies such as candy cane pieces, mints, nuts
and popcorn out of reach of children under age five.
- Keep small ornaments, tinsel, small figurines and other decorations away
from children's reach. Young children have a tendency to put everything
in their mouths.
Poisons
- While preparing your home for the holidays, be aware of poisons that can
come in seemingly innocent and unexpected forms.
- Open the flue in your fireplace when burning a fire to provide adequate
ventilation. The risk of carbon monoxide poisoning increases dramatically
in the winter. Proper ventilation reduces the risk of carbon monoxide poisoning.
Have all fuel-burning appliances checked annually before use in cold-weather
months. Install UL-approved carbon monoxide detectors in your home.
- Keep alcoholic drinks and containers out of reach. Holiday beverages such
as eggnog that contain alcohol may be sweet and inviting to young children.
Do not leave alcoholic drinks unattended since they might be harmful to children
if swallowed.
- Keep common baking ingredients such as vanilla and almond extract out of
reach. They contain high levels of alcohol and
may be harmful to young children if swallowed.
- Beware of fire salts used in fireplaces to produce colored flames.
They contain heavy metals and cause intense gastrointestinal
irritation or vomiting if eaten.
- Keep poisonous plants out of reach. Watch for
holly and mistletoe berries that fall on the ground because they are very
poisonous plants if eaten. Other poisonous holiday plants include: amaryllis,
azalea, boxwood, Christmas rose, Crown of Thorns, English ivy and Jerusalem
cherry. Contrary to popular belief, poinsettias are not poisonous, but they
can cause skin irritation and gastrointestinal distress.
- Avoid using artificial snow sprays to decorate. These sprays can cause
lung irritation if inhaled.
- List poison control center and emergency medical service phone numbers
by all telephones. In addition, leave a phone number for babysitters
so they can reach you if you go out to a holiday party.
- Keep ipecac syrup in the home to induce vomiting. Use only on the advice
of a poison control center or a physician.
The Kansas SAFE KIDS Coalition, Inc. is a nonprofit group of 67 statewide organizations
and businesses that have joined to protect Kansas children from unintentional
injury -- the leading killer of Kansas kids. Local coalitions and chapters are
located in Wichita, Johnson County, Lawrence, Salina, Barber County, Topeka,
Ford County, Manhattan, Hutchinson, Pottawatomie County, Clay County, Osage
County, and Leavenworth. Kansas SAFE KIDS is part of the National SAFE KIDS
Campaign.
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