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Childproofing Tips for Grandparents

As a grandparent, your grandchild’s well-being and safety are extremely important to you. Particularly when she is under your care—at your home, in her own home, in the car, or elsewhere—make sure that you’ve taken every step possible to ensure that she is safe and secure. Before you have your grandchild visit or stay at your home, make certain that you have reviewed and adopted the safety recommendations you will find below.

Safety Inside Your Home

There are plenty of safety measures you should implement in your home to protect your grandchild. To keep some of these guidelines in the forefront of your mind, use the acronym SPEGOS to help remind you of the following:

  • Smoke detectors should be placed in the proper locations throughout the house.
  • Pets and pet food should be stored out of a child’s reach.
  • Escape plans should be thought about in advance, and fire extinguish­ers
  • should be readily available.
  • Gates should be positioned at the top and bottom of stairs.
  • Outlet covers that are not a choking hazard should be placed over sockets to prevent your grandchild from putting herself at risk of an electrical shock. Use furniture or other objects to block access to electrical outlets, wherever possible.
  • Soft covers or bumpers should be positioned around sharp or solid furniture.

In addition to these general rules, be sure to keep important phone num­bers by the telephone and programmed into your mobile device. In an emergency, you’ll want to call not only 000 when appropriate, but also certain specific family members.

Another safety consideration:

Your special chairs or walking aids could be unstable and present a risk; if possible, move them into the closet or a room that your grandchild won’t be able to enter when he visits.

Nursery & Sleeping Area Safety

  • If you saved your own child’s crib, stored in your attic or garage, per­haps awaiting the arrival of a grandchild someday, you should replace it with a new one. Guidelines for children’s furniture and equipment have changed dramatically, and a crib that is more than a few years old will not meet today’s safety standards. This is likely also true for other saved and aging furniture that could pose risks to children, such as an old playpen.
  • Buy a changing table, use your own bed, or even a towel on the floor to change the baby’s diapers. As she gets a little older, and she becomes more likely to squirm, you may need a second person to help in changing her diaper.
  • Do not allow your grandchild to sleep in your bed.
  • Keep the diaper pail emptied.

Kitchen Safety

  • Put “kiddie locks” on the cabinets; to be extra safe, move unsafe
  • cleansers and chemicals so they’re completely out of reach.
  • Remove any dangling cords, such as those from the coffeepot or toaster.
  • Take extra precautions before giving your grandchild food prepared in microwave ovens. Microwaves can heat liquids and solids unevenly, and they may be mildly warm on the outside but very hot on the in­side.

Bathroom Safety

  • Store pills, inhalers, and other prescription or nonprescription medi­cations, as well as medical equipment, locked and out of the reach of your grandchild. Be especially vigilant that all medications of any kind are kept up and away from a child’s reach and sight.
  • Put nonslip material in the bathtub to avoid dangerous falls.
  • If there are handles and bars in the bathtub for your own use, cover them with soft material if you are going to be bathing the baby there.
  • Never leave a child unattended in a tub or sink filled with water.

Baby Equipment Safety

  • Never leave your grandchild alone in a high chair or in an infant seat located in high places, such as a table or countertop.
  • Do not use baby walkers.

Toy Safety

  • Buy new toys for your grandchild that have a variety of sounds, sights, and colors. Simple toys can be just as good. Remember, no matter how fancy the toys may be your own interac­tion and play with your grandchild are much more important.
  • Toys, CDs, and books should be age-appropriate and challenge chil­dren at their own developmental level.
  • Avoid toys with small parts that the baby could put into her mouth and swallow. Follow the recommendations on the package to find toys suitable for your grandchild’s age.
  • Because toy boxes can be dangerous, keep them out of your home, or look for one without a top or lid.

Garage & Basement Safety

  • Make sure that the automatic reversing mechanism on the garage door is operating.
  • Keep all garden chemicals and pesticides as well as tools in a locked cabinet and out of reach.

Safety Outside of the Home

  • Buy a car seat that you can keep inside your own car. Make sure you in­stall it properly (or have a trained professional install it for you) and that you can strap your grandchild into it easily.
  • Experiment with the buckles and clasps before you buy the car seat since their ease of use varies.
  • Make sure you know that your grandchild is out of harm’s way before backing your car out of the garage or down the driveway.
  • Purchase a stroller to use when taking the baby for a walk in your neighborhood.
  • On shopping trips, whenever possible choose stores that offer child-friendly shopping carts with seats that are low to the ground. Do not place your own car seat into a shopping cart, and avoid putting your grandchild in the seat at the top of the cart if possible. If you have a tricycle or bicycle at your home for your grandchild, make sure you also have a helmet for her. Let her choose a helmet in a special design or color.
    Although playgrounds can be fun, they also can be dangerous. Select one that has been designed to keep children as safe as possible; those at schools or at community-sponsored parks are often good choices.
  • Inspect your own backyard for anything hazardous or poisonous.

If you have a backyard swimming pool, or if you take your grandchild to another home or a park where there is a pool, familiarize yourself with these water safety guidelines:

  • There should be at least a 4-foot-high fence with a locking gate surrounding the pool.
  • Make sure that fences enclose neighbors’ pools, as well.
  • Practice touch supervision anytime your grandchild is in or near water.
  • You should also know CPR and how to swim.

How to build an essential first aid kit for townsville

Every year in Townsville our ER: cuts, ticks, infected bug bites, sunburns, eye injuries, broken bones, and all other kinds of fun gone wrong.

Being prepared means you need a first aid kit and know how to use it. Although pre-made store-bought first aid kits are a good start, these kits typically lack many items you’ll need for your family.

Shopping List for Your Summer First Aid Kit

So to help you get ready, I have prepared a shopping list below for your summer first aid kit. Get it built now, so that you spend your summer having fun, not in the ER.

  1. Premade first aid kit: It’s cheapest and easiest to start by buying a premade kit, because otherwise it is difficult to find small packages of all the different kinds of gauze, tape, and antibiotic ointment you will need. Find a large kit with a sturdy container with extra space to hold all the things you will add to it. Or, get a small duffle bag or backpack to hold your first-aid kit, and start by putting the pre-made kit in the bag. Be sure the pre-made kit includes Band-Aids, gauze, tape, antibiotic ointment, and anti-itch or steroid ointment.
  2. Water bottle for cleaning out wounds: The first thing you’ll need to do with a crying kid is clean out their wound. And the nearest water source is probably too far to walk. You can use your water bottle to treat dehydration, too.
  3. Benadryl (Diphenhydramine): Benadryl is probably the most important over-the-counter medication to have in your first aid kit—it’s a first line treatment for insect bites, hives, and other allergic reactions that can be deadly. Some premade kits will include Benadryl tablets, but if you have young children be sure to include a bottle of liquid, Children’s Benadryl or the generic equivalent. Benadryl is also a great treatment for an attack of seasonal allergies.
    EpiPen: If you have a family member with a history of severe allergic reactions (anaphylaxis), ask your physician for a prescription. I keep mine in the outside pocket of my first aid kit for quick, easy access.
  4. Numbing spray: Wound numbing spray can be purchased over-the-counter at any pharmacy and can really save-the-day when a child is burned, sunburned, or has a painful cut or scrape.
    Prescription medication: Ask your physician for an extra prescription for any medication you use frequently, especially asthma and allergy medications. Keep the extra supply in your car first-aid kit. You’ll be grateful when you can stay at your child’s sporting event rather than head home for an inhaler or other medication.
  5. Ibuprofen and Tylenol: Most pre-made kits include these standard pain medications, but you will have to add the liquid kind for children.
  6. Dramamine, nausea medication: There’s an easy fix for vomiting, car sick kids—nausea medication. Don’t leave home without it. You’ll kick yourself for not having it while you clean the vomit out of your car.
  7. Sunblock: The worst sunburns occur when you least expect it—at sports events, or while doing yard work. Have some 30+ sunblock ready to cover those little spots on your ears and neck that your hat doesn’t cover.
    Include some SPF lip balm or ChapStick, too.
  8. Bug spray: The best protection comes from a repellant that contains 30% DEET. Insect bites are annoying at best, but at worst they get scratched and infected. We are seeing a growing number of insect bites that become infected with the antibiotic-resistant bacteria MRSA, which is difficult to treat.
  9. Afrin nasal spray for nosebleeds: Although I generally don’t recommend Afrin nasal spray for congestion related to allergies or illness, Afrin is a quick fix for a nosebleed. This medication causes the capillaries in the nose to constrict, thereby limiting the blood flow to the nasal mucosa and stopping the bleeding.
  10. Hydrocortisone ointment: This inexpensive over-the-counter medication will treat almost anything that itches—insect bites, etc. If you stop the itch, the kids won’t scratch, and you reduce the risk of secondary infection.
  11. Flashlight/headlamp: If you don’t have a reliable light on your cell phone, include an LED flashlight or headlamp. You can buy these very affordably now, even at the dollar store. A flashlight is not just for nighttime injuries—you’ll need a bright light to get a good look at splinters, or look in kids’ mouths, ears, etc.
  12. Baby wipes: Even if your kids are out of diapers, a pack of baby wipes is infinitely useful in the car, especially for keeping hands clean and wiping noses.
  13. ChapStick: ChapStick or lip balm can sooth cold sores, lip injuries, and sunburned lips in addition to regular chapped lips. You’ll be glad you have it when you child complains about their chapped lips for the sixth time in ten minutes while you are on a family outing.
  14. Clean towel: A nice clean towel is perfect for setting up your first-aid station while you dress a wound or remove a splinter. It’s also useful for containing bleeding on bigger injuries. Consider a highly absorbent micro fiber towel that can be stuffed into a small space.
  15. Feminine hygiene supplies: Besides their obvious uses, tampons and maxi pads are very helpful for wound management and are an essential part of any first aid kit. An tampon can very effectively treat a persistent nosebleed. The smallest tampons fit nicely in the nose. Bleeding wounds can be easily controlled with a maxi-pad held in place with an Bandage.
  16. Premade finger splint: Not sure if that finger is broken or not? Just put it in a pre-made finger splint until you get your child to the doctor. You can buy premade finger splints at any pharmacy.
    Alcohol wipes: I mostly use these for sterilizing my first aid kit instruments, such as tweezers and scissors. They are also useful for cleaning skin before trying to remove splinters.
  17. Bandage: Although a first line treatment for sprains and strains, bandages are also useful for holding bandages in place on bigger wounds, and holding splints on fractures.
  18. Small scissors: For cutting dressings to the right size, cutting medical tape, opening packages, trimming fingernails and hangnails, etc.
  19. A bottle of Gatorade: Very useful for hypoglycemia, dehydration, etc. Also useful as an occasional bribe for an over-tired, hungry child.
  20. Ziplock bags: Ziplocks are essential for keeping track of teeth that fall out or are knocked out. Did you pull a tick off your child? Stick it in the Ziplock bag for later identification. Certain kinds of ticks are more likely to carry pathogens that cause other illnesses.
  21. Tweezers & small magnifying glass: I mostly use these for removing splinters, but occasionally they are necessary to remove bugs from ears, fishing hooks from fingers, etc. Of note, tweezers are NOT the best way to remove a tick.

Keep Your First Aid Kit in Your Car. You’ll never have to remember to pack it. If you need something while you are at home, just go out and get it. If you have more than one family car, consider making a first aid kit for each car.

Childproofing your home

Before or as soon as children begin crawling or walking, parents and caregivers need to take extra steps to make sure harmful items are out of reach, out of sight, and locked up if possible.
Check each room in your home to ensure the items below are stored out of reach of children and/or stored in a locked cabinet with a safety latch.

Cleaning products:

  • All-purpose cleaners
  • Bleach
  • Dish washing detergent (liquid, powdered, or single-use packets or tablets)
  • Drain openers and toilet bowl cleaners
  • Furniture polish
  • Laundry detergent (liquid, powdered, or single-use packets or tablets)

Personal and hygiene products:

  • Nail polish removers
  • Cosmetics
  • Mouthwash
  • Perfume and aftershave

Items that may be stored in your basement or garage:

  • Antifreeze and windshield wiper fluid
  • Gasoline, kerosene, and lamp oil
  • Insecticides

Medicines:

  • Prescription medicines
  • Over-the-counter medicines
  • Vitamins and supplements

Houseplants:

Certain houseplants may be harmful. Call Poison Help at 13 11 26 for a list or description of plants to avoid. You may want to do without houseplants for a while or, at the very least, keep all houseplants out of reach.

Small objects:

  • Beads, buttons, coins
  • Button batteries
  • Pins
  • Refrigerator magnets or products and toys with small or loose magnets Screws

Alcohol:

  • Alcohol can be very poisonous to a young child. Remember to empty any unfinished drinks right away.

Trash:

  • Keep in mind that children may get into trash containers. Trash containers that contain spoiled food, sharp objects (like discarded razor blades), or batteries should have a child-resistant cover or be kept out of a child’s reach. Purses and other bags that hold potential hazards, including medicines, should be kept out of a child’s reach too.

Important Reminders:

  • Most poisonings occur when parents or caregivers are home but not paying attention.
  • Keep products in original packaging.
  • Store in locked cabinets or containers, out of sight and reach of children.
  • Install a safety latch—that locks when you close the door—on child accessible cabinets.
  • Detergent in single-use laundry packets is very concentrated and can be toxic. Even a small amount of the detergent can cause serious breathing or stomach problems or eye irritation.
  • Never let your children handle or play with the packets. The packets dissolve quickly when in contact with water, wet hands, or saliva.
  • Remember to seal the container and store it in a locked cabinet after each use. Make sure the container is out of sight and reach of children.
  • Adults should follow the instructions on the product label.
  • Medicines can be harmful if not taken as directed.
  • Purchase and keep medicines in original containers with safety caps.
  • Check the label each time you give a child medicine to ensure proper dosage.
  • Small objects can be choking hazards or harmful if swallowed.
  • Check your floors regularly for small objects. This is particularly important if someone in the household has a hobby that involves small items or if there are older children who have small items.
  • Make sure battery covers are secure on remote controls, key fobs, musical books, and greeting cards. Store devices that contain small button-cell batteries out of reach and sight of children. Button batteries can cause
  • Severe injury or death if ingested.