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CPSC Warns Drowning Dangers Do Not End with Pool Season

Release Date: September 28, 2006

Cooler weather in most of the country means swimming pools have closed for the season, but parents and caregivers should know that other drowning dangers still exist in and around the home. The U.S. Consumer Product Safety Commission (CPSC) is warning that children need to be supervised around the home and protected from these potentially hidden drowning hazards.

"Parents of young children can never let their guard down when it comes to water," said CPSC Acting Chairman Nancy Nord. "They need to be aware that bathtubs, buckets, and other containers in and around the home pose drowning hazards all year long."

Though an average of about 280 children younger than 5 years old drown in swimming pools each year, an average of about 150 additional children also drown at home in bathtubs, hot tubs and spas, buckets, toilets, trash cans, landscape or fish ponds and decorative fountains.

After pools, more children drown in bathtubs than in any other product in and around the home. For 2002 (the most recent year of complete data), CPSC has reports of 69 children younger than 5 who drowned in bathtubs. More than 80 percent were younger than 2 years old – 33 children were younger than 1 year old, and 23 children were between 1 and 2 years old.

Most bathtub drowning cases involved a child left unattended in the tub. In at least 27 of the 69 incidents, another child was also in the tub. In one incident, the victim and a sibling were placed in the tub without water while the mother left the home. It is believed the sibling turned on the water and the victim drowned.

In six of the bathtub incident reports, children were left to play in a tub with the water running and the drain left open. The parent or caregiver assumed the open drain would prevent the bathtub from filling up and left the bathroom. When they returned, the drain was closed or clogged, the water had filled the bathtub, and the child was submerged.

For 2002, CPSC is also aware of nine drowning deaths to children younger than 5 involving spas or hot tubs, six deaths involving 5-gallon and other-sized buckets, four deaths in wading pools, two deaths in toilets, two deaths in outdoor fish or landscape ponds, two deaths in fountains, one death in a plastic trash can, and one death in a 16-inch tall water barrel.

Home Drowning Prevention Tips include:

 

- Young children can drown in even small amounts of water. Never leave young children alone near any water.

- Always keep a young child within arm's reach in a bathtub. Never leave to answer the phone, answer the door, get a towel or for any other reason. If you must leave, take the child with you.

- Don't leave a baby or toddler in a bathtub under the care of another young child.

- A baby bath seat is never a substitute for supervision. A bath seat is a bathing aid, not a safety device. Babies can slip or climb out of bath seats and drown.

- Keep toilet lids down to prevent access to water. Consider using toilet clips to stop young children from opening the lids.

- Consider keeping children out of bathrooms by using bathroom door latches that are out of reach of young children.

- Never leave a bucket containing even a small amount of liquid unattended. After using a bucket, always empty and store it where young children cannot reach it. Buckets left outside can collect rainwater and are a hazard. Toddlers can fall headfirst into 4- and 5-gallon buckets and drown.

- To prevent children from gaining access to spas or hot tubs when not in use, always secure safety covers and barriers. Non-rigid covers (such as solar covers) do not provide protection from drowning. They can appear to be in place even after children slip underneath them into the water.

- Learn CPR (cardiopulmonary resuscitation). It can be a lifesaver when seconds count.

To get a free copy of the Prevent Child In-Home Drowning Death publication, email CPSC at publications@cpsc.gov or call our Hotline at (800) 638-2772.

Release Number
06-268

About the U.S. CPSC
The U.S. Consumer Product Safety Commission (CPSC) is charged with protecting the public from unreasonable risk of injury or death associated with the use of thousands of types of consumer products. Deaths, injuries, and property damage from consumer product-related incidents cost the nation more than $1 trillion annually. CPSC's work to ensure the safety of consumer products has contributed to a decline in the rate of injuries associated with consumer products over the past 50 years. 

Federal law prohibits any person from selling products subject to a Commission ordered recall or a voluntary recall undertaken in consultation with the CPSC.

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