Most head injuries heal, but any damage to
the brain is usually permanent. Many serious head injuries
can be prevented by taking the following precautions:
- When you drive, place your child in a
car safety seat. When your child weighs 40 pounds or
more, use a booster safety seat. Don't use the regular
car seat and lap belt until your child weighs over 60
pounds. All states now have child-restraint laws and
with good reason: They reduce injuries by 80 percent and
deaths by 90 percent.
- To prevent pedestrian accidents, teach
your child to look both ways before crossing and while
crossing a street or alley. Teach him to use crosswalks
and not to run across the street. Most children cannot
safely cross the street alone until age 7 or 8.
- Never leave an infant of any age alone
on a high place like a bed, sofa, changing table, or an
exam table in the doctor's office. Your baby may
unexpectedly roll over for the first time or wiggle off
and fall on his head.
- Always keep the side rails up on the
crib. As soon as your child can pull to standing in the
crib, lower the mattress.
- Don't buy a bunk bed. If you already
have one, keep children under age 6 years out of the top
bunk and use a side rail. Be sure the bed frame is
strong enough to keep the mattress from falling through.
And don't let your children jump on beds.
- Don't buy a baby walker. They do not
help your baby develop walking skills. Thirty-five
percent of infants using walkers have accidents
requiring emergency care.
- Don't leave your child unattended in a
shopping cart.
- Place a sturdy gate at the top of
stairways. Keep the stairway cleared of clutter. When
your child starts to climb stairs, teach him to hold
onto the banister when he goes down the stairs.
- Keep doors leading to the basement or
outdoors closed. Secure them with an extra latch above
the child's reach.
- If you live on an upper floor of a
building, install window locks or guards.
- Don't leave younger children under the
supervision of an aggressive sibling.
- Always supervise your child's outside
play until she can be trusted to stay in the yard (age 4
or 5). Three-year-olds can't be expected to keep
promises not to go near the street.
- Don't teach your child how to ride a
bicycle until your child is old enough (age 7 or 8) to
understand safety issues such as emergency stops and
rules about right-of-way.
- Never allow your child to ride a bike
unless he is wearing a bicycle helmet. All-terrain
vehicles (ATVs) and motorcycles are too unsafe to ride,
even with a helmet.
- Forbid trampolines. Serious accidents
have occurred even with close supervision.