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Parents
and Caregivers should be reminded that summer heat makes it especially dangerous
to leave children in cars.

The risk of a serious injury or death during hot weather is heightened for
children left alone in vehicles, according to the National Highway Traffic
Safety Administration (NHTSA). New research shows that for children,
hyperthermia (heat-stroke), is the leading cause of non-crash vehicle
deaths.
Even with the windows rolled down two inches, it only takes 10 minutes for
the inside of a vehicle to reach deadly temperatures on a hot summer day.
Children should never be left alone in or around a motor vehicle, not even
for a quick errand. Any number of things can go critically wrong in the
blink of an eye.
Each year, 262 children under the age of 14 are killed and 115,000 are
injured in not-in-traffic incidents on private roads, driveways and in
parking lots according to a new NHTSA study. Out of that number, 44
fatalities and 105,000 injuries are the result of non-crashes. These
incidents include hyperthermia, strangulation by power windows, carbon
monoxide poisoning and more. Many of the remaining deaths and injuries in
not-in-traffic incidents are the result of a vehicle backing over a child
that the driver did not see.
Safety tips from NHTSA to prevent hyperthermia
include:
Never leave a child unattended in a vehicle.
Do not let your children play in an unattended vehicle. Teach them that a
vehicle is not a play area.
Never leave infants or children in a parked vehicle, even if the windows
are partially open or with the engine running and the air
conditioning on.
Make a habit of looking in the vehicle - front and back - before locking
the door and walking away.
Ask your childcare provider to call you if your child does not show up for
childcare. Do things to remind yourself that a child is in the
vehicle, such as:
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Writing yourself a note and putting the note
where you will see it when you leave the vehicle.
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Placing your purse, briefcase or something else
you need in the back seat so that you will have to check the back seat when
you leave the vehicle, or
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Keeping an object in the car seat, such as a
stuffed toy. When the child is buckled in, place the object where the driver
will notice it when he or she is leaving the vehicle.
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Always lock vehicle doors and trunks and keep
keys out of children's reach. If a child is missing, check the vehicle
first, including the trunk.
If you see a child alone in a hot vehicle, call
the police. If they are in distress due to heat, get them out as quickly as
possible. Warning signs may include: red, hot and moist or dry skin, no
sweating, a strong rapid pulse or a slow weak pulse, nausea or acting
strangely. Cool the child rapidly. Call 911 or your local emergency number
immediately.
From our Partners with the
National Highway Traffic Safety Administration |