Safety at Home

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Welcome to the UL community! Share your thoughts with other moms, learn how others are staying safe, get ideas for fun family activities, take our quiz and learn some things you might not expect. Moms often say the best information comes from other moms. We invite you to jump in and explore.

Locked Out

June 14th, 2010

By Whitney

The brevity of this post can be blamed on a minor mishap that characterized my afternoon.   I left the house without my key.

(photo credit: stephendepolo on flickr.com)

My college roommate and go-to “rescue me” friend lives within blocks of my house, but when we dug through her infamous junk drawer, we discovered a collection of fifteen or twenty unlabled keys.  Sure that mine was one of the ones with a distinct key chain, she sent me off with two to try.  Neither worked.

My kids were totally fine with playing in our backyard with no access to our house. My husband joked via text message that we could pee in the grassy area and survive on our meager garden vegetables.  (He had already agreed to begin his commute home early if I needed him to.)

The whole thing was over in a couple of hours, as it turned out that my friend did indeed have a copy of my house key.  After discovering it at her house, she surprised me and my children by emerging from our backdoor and inviting us inside our own house.

So I guess tomorrow I’ll go hide a key under a rock in my neighbor’s backyard.  What’s your rescue plan?

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The Scoop on Dryer Lint

June 11th, 2010

By Heather

I was browsing the urban safety myths on UL.com recently and I saw the piece about dryer lint.  I was immediately intrigued.

No really.

My friend, the home contractor, has told me some excellent stories about dryer lint linked to spontaneous explosions in old, dusty basements so I wanted to know “is dryer lint really a big deal?”

This is some of what I learned:

At coin-operated laundries, laundry owners are adamant about maintaining proper air flow through their commercial dryers. With 30 to 50 dryers at the average laundry, operators clear trashcan amounts of lint everyday from their screens.

The Association of Home Appliance Manufacturers urges consumers to clean the lint filter after each load and occasionally remove the filter and clean it with a nylon brush and hot, soapy water to remove residue. This simple chore not only improves air flow and energy efficiency, but it also reduces the chance of a dryer fire.

(Photo by  außerirdische sind gesund on Flickr)

“Lint is the bane of our existence,” says Brian Wallace, president of the Coin Laundry Association. “We can’t afford not to clean lint, not only as a safety issue, but to keep our energy costs down and ensure proper performance.”

After hearing my friend’s stories and reading about the improved energy efficiency and safety issues with lint traps, I hauled my vacuum cleaner attachment into the slot and sucked up all matter of sand and kid detritus along with the standard helping of lint. I have yet to get busy with a nylon brush and soapy water.

P.S:  did you know that dryer lint is compostable?! You’re welcome.

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A Personal Story About Kids and Bike Safety

June 9th, 2010

By Heather

We are a big biking family. Our set of bikes comprises our “second car” and we like it that way.  In fact, I’ve written about bicycle and helmet safety a number of times on this site.

heather_son_bike

My son was hit by a car while riding his bike this weekend. On my watch.

“Hit by a car” sounds very dramatic.  True, but terrible.  “Run over by…” is, thankfully, not what happened, but perhaps the story is softened if I say “backed into by…” or “knocked over by…”.   In any case, a parked car started backing (from a dead stop) out of a driveway while my five year old son was riding on the sidewalk behind him.

I watched the whole thing from the position of one or two bike lengths behind him.  It was terrifying.

I screamed, “STOP!!” (at my son, at the car, at the world) and the world listened. Everyone stopped.

My son stood up, crying, and ran from the bike.  The driver and nearby friend stopped and sat with us to make sure we were all okay.  His helmet (and head!) never hit the ground or the car.  He suffered a scraped knee and a bruised shoulder but otherwise he and his bike checked out just fine.

These are some great tips on kids and bike safety from the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration. For our part, we were following all of them and our accident still happened.

Every time we bike past a driveway with a car in it, I tell my five year old to check for a driver.   In this instance, the driver was not visible to my son nor was my son visible to the driver.   Maybe we need to get him a flag?!

Do you have any special tips to share for a child new to two-wheelers?  Does your child under ten ride on the sidewalk?  Do you have a near-heart attack letting your over-ten-year-old ride in the street?

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Beyond “No”

March 12th, 2010

By Whitney

beyondno

Keeping your clueless toddler away from hot, sharp, and electrically charged things is just part of the job. We start this process by saying “No!” in a stern voice, and reinforcing what that means by moving the dangerous item or moving the baby. “No” becomes such an easy access word, doesn’t it? Stored at the front part of your brain, it enables us to respond quickly with a straightforward command.

But it’s not really a command, is it? And it’s not an explanation. By the time a child is two years old, according to my pediatrician, she really can understand deeper explanations for why she must not touch things and should be introduced to the terms “safe” and “dangerous.”

A year or so ago, my mom was giving my son a bath, and he kept standing up. She tried to reason with him. She asked nicely. She was clearly trying to avoid threatening him with ending the bath (which I would have done easily, but I understand that Grandma doesn’t want to discipline during their precious short visits). Finally she blurted out, “It’s just not safe!” And he sat down.

Kids understand so much, even if they cannot use the words themselves. Moving from “No” to a more sophisticated discussion of “You could fall down and get an owie,” “Stroller buckles keep kids safe,” or “You need to wait for a grown-up to help you,” is the next step toward helping kids make good choices when it comes to safety.

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Click it or risk it

January 29th, 2010

By Heather

I noticed a toddler girl flip out of her stroller and do a face plant on a sidewalk this afternoon. Ouch!

She was surrounded by both parents and an auntie and uncle, so what went wrong?

Rewinding the scene, you would have seen something like this:

  1. Mommy sets her daughter in the stroller while also juggling shopping, diaper bags, and a lunchbox.
  2. Daddy steps in to push the stroller from the store
  3. Away they go

Nobody buckled the stroller’s 5-point harness seatbelt.

fivepoint

It’s tempting to skip the buckle on a stroller for an older baby or toddler, especially if you know you’re just going to let them out again in a second. But it’s never a good idea.

In this case, the little girl landed on her face and got a fat lip.

As my husband and I were debriefing about the scene, we immediately recalled two similar incidents with our two-year-old Milo:

  • The time Milo was buckled in but had no brake on his stroller and rolled off the  front porch
  • The time he tripped over his own rain boot and landed on his face for a similar fat lip

What’s my point? Everyday actions can result in accidents. Safe habits are what mitigate risk. To keep our families safe, we ought to check and re-check.

Does anyone have any similar stories that they’re not too embarrassed to share, so that we may all learn from them?

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Do you have a fire escape plan?

January 19th, 2010

By Heather

At four and a half, my son Holden is pretty sure he knows everything. Yesterday, I asked him what he would do if he came into a room and there was a lit candle (unattended). He said he’d blow it out (pretty good, kid).

I probed a little further. What would he do if, in blowing the candle out, something caught fire? He said he had no idea (uh oh). That wasn’t the answer I was hoping for. We talked about some of the smart things that a little boy can do like leave the room, call for help, get low, etc. And we’ll keep talking about it and doing dry runs. Next time, with a fire fighter’s dress-up hat.

Make sure that you have a plan for what to do in case of a fire and your kids know it. Talk about fires and practice escape drills when you’re not in an emergency so your kids can be prepared.

Here are a few additional tips about having a workable fire escape plan in these videos:

Designate a convenient family meeting place.


Practice the escape plan.


What do you do to help your kids be more prepared for a fire?

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Plug Obsessed

January 13th, 2010

By Whitney

The tree is gone. The lights are down. The ornaments are back in storage where they belong until next December. What am I left with, in addition to lovely family memories of this holiday season?

A five-year old who is obsessed with plugging things in.

After the Safety at Home wreath-making party, I told Julian that he could plug in the lights that were wrapped around his wreath as long as an adult is watching him. This seemed simple enough. He loved the new privilege, and each day when we came in the door after school, he raced over to his wreath and said, “Mommy, can you watch me plug this in?!”

Blog Photo

Then, when we really started decking our halls, he became enthralled. The simple strand of lights that turn on when plugged into the wall? Now they plug into an extension cord! And the extension cord plugs into the wall! He wanted to plug and unplug both of these connections on a regular basis. “Plugs are not toys.” I have made this motherly statement about 693 times since Christmas.

When we decorated the plum tree in our front yard, the excitement grew to another level. Three! Strings! Of Lights! All plugged into one another in a glorious daisy chain of electricity! He walked back and forth from the tree to the outlet just inside our crawl space where the cords meet up with the juice that powers them. I could see him tracing the logistics of what plugs into what over and over again. He was getting geekier by the minute.

And then? When we visited festive destinations (such as every single retail store during December), he would disappear behind fixtures and underneath curtains, on his knees examining the system by which the holiday lights were being powered. We could not walk by a store window without stopping to discuss where the lights or moving reindeer might be plugged in.

Now that the Grinch has visited our home and removed all of the holiday lights, Julian is acutely aware of how many outlets are in our house. (42, he’ll tell anyone who comes to visit.) For every outlet that’s not being used, he has a suggestion. He’ll dig an extension cord out of a cabinet in the laundry room and bring it over to me in the dining room. “Mommy, can I plug this in?”

And I don’t know where this obsession will end. Just yesterday he realized that many of our appliances have USB outlets and headphone jacks. He walked around with a set of headphones, looking for a place to stick the jack. And, I caught him trying to plug a microphone from our video game console into our home computer.

So if you ever need an electrician with absolutely no experience, but full of unbridled enthusiasm, I’ve got a 5-year old who would very much like the job.

(If you’ve got kids under five in your house or visiting your house, make sure to keep all outlets covered with childproof plug inserts. Even the outlets behind the couch – those are the most compelling to toddlers!)

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Listen, watch and learn

November 9th, 2009

By Heather

Did you notice our snazzy new redesign of SafetyAtHome? We hope so. Things are different, but in a good way. Now you can find easier access to community features like our RSS feed, Twitter stream and helpful safety videos on YouTube.

Last week, Whitney and I filmed some new safety videos for the holiday season. We learned a lot while creating the videos … about saving money on energy, safely decorating for the holidays and the proper way to clean gutters …  and we look forward to sharing these with our readers and (now) viewers.

In the meantime, let me formally introduce the new UL YouTube channel for SafetyAtHome. Also, be careful if you decide to deep fry your holiday turkey.

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Keep it Covered: Hot Tub Safety

September 8th, 2009

By Whitney

During the trying-to-conceive and pregnancy phases of our lives, my husband and I deprived ourselves of hot tub use. With that all behind us, now we indulge in a hot tub whenever possible. We have been delighted to find so many hotels that offer Jacuzzi spas in the room or on the deck. And we haven’t worried too much about safety since we only reserve a schmancy spa room when we are traveling without our children.

At my friend Karen’s vacation house, not only is the hot tub UL certified, but the hot tub cover is also UL certified. I was pleased to see the UL mark on both of these pieces of equipment at her house, because we always have our kids with us when we are there, and the combination of kids and hot tubs is quite dangerous.

Why? Because kids, who really like to get in the hot tub because it feels like a pool sized just right for them, may not be good judges of their ability to sit or stand, especially if bubbles are obscuring the view of the tub’s bottom. They are more likely to have the “Who can stay underwater the longest?” contest, exposing them to great risk of getting trapped by a strong drain. Children are not physically strong and the suction may overpower them easily. In short, adult supervision is critical when it comes to hot tub use.

Three important hot tub guidelines to follow

1. Keep a secure lid on the hot tub whenever it’s not in use. The lid should be heavy enough that a curious child cannot move it aside to access the water.

2. A supervising adult must always be on duty and armed with knowledge of how to cut off the suction in an emergency.

3. If you are the owner of a hot tub, make sure to keep it maintained and inspected regularly, especially making sure that drain covers are not cracked or broken.

We are headed to a resort in Palm Springs this weekend for one last family vacation weekend before school starts. Unfortunately, in a hotel pool situation, there is typically no cover on the spa.

Hot Tub

I’ve been lucky to have had my fill of hot tubs this summer. Therefore, I’m secretly hoping for a pool-only lounge area. I will be more relaxed with my two preschoolers if there’s simply no spa in sight. Wish me luck.

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Back to School Safely

September 2nd, 2009

By Heather

In our town, if you live less than 1.5 miles from school, you are not eligible for the school bus … budget cuts, wah, don’t get me started! Consequently, there will be many little people walking, hurried commuters driving, enviro-conscious bikers pedaling, and the regular school bus traveling its route all fighting for the same roads. Throw in some hills, weather and a sunset for poor visibility, and you have a recipe for chaos.

Getting to and from school safely
As schools get back in session, please take extra care during morning and afternoon commutes:

  • Respect and obey school crossing guards. Wave hello to them; they are doing an important job.
  • As you pull into traffic at all intersections and near school parking lots, be aware of walking children.
  • Remember school zones and follow posted speed limits. Don’t try to speed around school zones. If your commute permits, consider taking another road next time.
  • Follow basic rules for a stopped school bus:

    1) When a school bus stops and flashes red light(s), drivers approaching from either direction must stop at least 20 feet away from the bus.


    2) Once stopped for a school bus, drivers may not start until the red lights stop flashing or the bus driver waves


    3) After stopping for a school bus, drivers must watch for children along the side of the road and drive slowly until past them.
  • Be on the lookout for children who may wander into traffic while waiting for and when getting on and off of the school bus.

Just as I ask you not to speed through my neighborhood street in the summertime, now I ask you to please be cautious as you drive when our children are heading back to school. Thank you!

Related post: cross roads safely and silently

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