Watchfulness Is Focus Of Baby Safety Week
WASHINGTON, D.C.--Government and industry cooperative
efforts have resulted in significant safety improvement in
children's nursery products, but watchfulness by parents and
other adults is still necessary. Last year there were an
estimated 72,000 nursery product-related injuries to children
under age five, the Consumer Product Safety Commission (CPSC)
reported today. The agency also found an average of over 70
deaths per year associated with nursery products over the past
five years. The agency released these figures for the observance
of Baby Safety Week, September 15-23, an annual joint observance
with the Juvenile Products Manufacturers Association.
"There is no substitute for adult supervision protecting
children from death and injury," said CPSC Acting Chairman Anne
Graham. Safe products (conforming to either mandatory or
voluntary standards) cannot always prevent accidents. "A child
in a walker can still fall down a flight of stairs." Walkers
were associated with the largest number of injuries during 1988
followed by strollers and carriages and cribs.
In spite of safety improvements in the design and
construction of nursery products, there are still older products
being used in homes and in other types of facilities.
Over 50 of the deaths were associated with cribs, more than
with any other nursery product. Many of these are older cribs,
such as those stored in attics, or sold at garage/yard sales.
These older cribs may have slat spacing more than 2 3/8 inches in
width, decorative cutouts, or high corner posts, hazards that can
result in strangulation.
Child care facilities such as family day care providers and
day care centers too should be aware of potential hazards, the
agency advised. Parents should be as concerned with the nursery
equipment used in these child care facilities as much as they are
in their own homes.
To help parents and others identify these and other nursery
equipment hazards, a checklist and other safety information is
available from the Consumer Product Safety Commission, Office of
Information and Public Affairs, Washington, D.C. 20207.
Baby Safety Week is a joint program by the Commission and
the Juvenile Products Manufacturers Association, which represents
the manufacturers of cribs, high chairs, play yards, car seats,
carriages, strollers and related products. Since mid-1970s the
Association has sponsored voluntary safety certification programs
to ensure conformance to a number of voluntary standards for
nursery products.
