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1000 SW Jackson
Suite 230
Topeka, KS 66612-1274
(785) 296-1223
(785) 296-8645 (FAX)
Coordinator:
Jan Stegelman
Executive Committee
Dennis Cooley, MD
Medical Advisor
American Academy of
Pediatrics, Kansas
Chapter
Vanda Easley
State Farm Insurance
Companies
Cindy Hermes
State Capitol Area
Firefighters Association
Ami Hyten
Kansas Trial Lawyers
Association
Elena Nuss
Kansas State
Fire Marshall's Office
Rosanne Rutkowski
Kansas State Nurses
Association
Cindy Yelkin
Kansas Hospital
Association |
For Immediate Release:
October 14, 2003 |
Contact:Jan Stegelman
785-296-1223 or
Cherie Sage
785-296-0351 |
Make Safety One Of Your Treats this Halloween
Halloween is one of the most exciting nights of the year for children,
and also one of the most dangerous. As kids hit the street to trick-or-treat,
the potential for unintentional injury rises. In fact, children
are four times more likely to be hit by a car on Halloween than
any other night of the year. Halloween can indeed be scary, with
increases in pedestrian injuries, burns and falls among children.
"The excitement of trick-or-treating may be a distraction for kids.
Careless street crossing coupled with drivers' more limited vision
at night can make for a deadly mix," said Jan Stegelman, Coordinator,
Kansas SAFE KIDS. "Many of the risks kids face on Halloween can
be avoided if parents discuss important safety precautions with
their kids." As children scurry from house to house, collecting
treats, it is important for all of us to review these safety tips:
For kids ages 12 and under:
- Adults should accompany children under age 12 on their trick-or-treat
rounds.
- Attach the name, address and phone number (including area code)
of children under age 12 to their clothes in case they get separated
from adults.
For kids ages 12 and older:
- Teach your child his or her phone number.
- Make sure your children have change for a phone call in case
they have a problem away from home.
- Instruct children to travel only in familiar areas and along
a pre-established route.
- Instruct children never to enter a home or an apartment building
unless accompanied by an adult.
- Set a time for children to return home.
- Restrict trick-or-treating visits to homes with porch or outside
lights illuminated.
- Tell children to bring their treats home before eating them.
Parents should check treats to ensure that items have not been
tampered with and are safely sealed. Be careful with fruit. Inspect
the surface closely for punctures or holes and cut it open before
allowing a child to eat it.
All Ages:
- Remove breakable items or obstacles such as tools, ladders and
children's toys from your steps, lawn and porch. Keep jack-o'-lanterns
lit with candles away from landings or doorsteps where costumes
might brush against the flame.
PEDESTRIAN INJURIES
Halloween is the most dangerous night of the year for child pedestrians.
Darting out into the street is one of the most common causes of
pedestrian death among children.
Visibility
- Decorate costumes, bags and sacks with retroreflective tape
and stickers.
- Use costumes that are light or bright enough to make children
more visible at night.
Traffic
- Teach children to walk, not run, while trick-or-treating.
- Remind children to stop at all street corners before crossing.
Tell them to cross streets only at intersections and crosswalks.
- Teach them to look left, right and left again before crossing
the street and to continue looking both ways as they cross.
- Teach them never to dart out into a street or cross between
parked cars.
- Never let children under age 12 go trick-or-treating or cross
the street without adult supervision.
Motorists
- Slow down in residential neighborhoods.
- Obey all traffic signs and signals.
- Watch for children walking in the street or on medians and curbs.
- Enter and exit driveways and alleyways slowly and carefully.
- Teach children to exit and enter the car on the curbside, away
from traffic.
FALLS
Falls are the number one cause of unintentional injury hospitalizations
in Kansas children. On Halloween night, cumbersome costumes and
blinding masks can make walking safely through dark neighborhoods
difficult. The following tips can help prevent fall-related injuries:
- Apply face paint or cosmetics directly to the face. It is safer
than a loose-fitting mask that can obstruct a child's vision.
- If a mask is worn, be certain it fits securely. Cut the eyeholes
large enough for full vision.
- Give trick-or-treaters flashlights.
- Make costumes short enough to avoid tripping.
- Secure hats so they will not slip over children's eyes.
- Dress children in shoes that fit.
- Allow children to carry only flexible knives, swords or other
props. Anything they carry could injure them if they fall.
- Teach children not to cut across yards. Lawn ornaments and clotheslines
are "hidden hazards" in the dark. Tell your children to stay on
the sidewalk at all times.
BURNS
Fires and burns are the third leading cause of unintentional injury-related
death among Kansas children. On Halloween, Kansas SAFE KIDS recommends
the following:
- Look for "flame resistant" labels on costumes, masks,
beards and wigs.
- Use fire resistant material when making costumes.
- Avoid costumes made of flimsy material and outfits with big,
baggy sleeves or billowing skirts. These are more likely to come
in contact with an exposed flame, such as a candle, than tighter
fitting costumes.
- Keep candles, pumpkins with candles, matches and lighters out
of children's reach.
A Halloween safety checklist can be found at www.safekids.org.
Kansas SAFE KIDS, Inc. is a nonprofit coalition of 67 statewide
organizations and businesses dedicated to preventing unintentional
injuries to Kansas children ages 0-14. Local coalitions and chapters
are located in Anderson, Clay, Dickinson, Doniphan, Douglas, Ford,
Franklin, Johnson, Marion, Montgomery, Osage, Pottawatomie, Rice,
Saline, and Shawnee Counties, as well as Chanute, Hutchinson, Junction
City, Leavenworth, Manhattan, Norton, Pittsburg, and Wichita. Kansas
SAFE KIDS is affiliated with the National SAFE KIDS Campaign.
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