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Report Finds More Deaths on Home Playgrounds Than Public Playgrounds
CPSC, KaBOOM! Launch Campaign to Make Backyard Playgrounds Safer
KaBOOM! Media Contact: Kimberley Rudd
(312) 822-5871
CPSC Contact: Ken Giles
(301) 504-0580 Ext. 1184
WASHINGTON, D.C - A new report shows that over a ten-year period,
more deaths to children occurred on backyard playgrounds than
on public
playgrounds. From 1990 to August 2000, the Consumer Product Safety
Commission (CPSC) has reports of nearly 150 deaths to children
under
the age of 15 involving playground equipment; at least 90 of these
occurred in a home setting. Almost three-fourths of the deaths
in
home locations resulted from hangings from ropes, cords, homemade
rope swings, and other similar items. New safety standards, aimed
at
reducing the risk of strangulation, require that ropes be secured
at both ends and that makers of home equipment warn against attaching
additional ropes.
Playground equipment is also a leading cause of injuries to children.
In 1999 alone, it is estimated that there were more than 200,000
playground-equipment injuries, with almost 47,000 injuries on
home playgrounds to children under age 15. The proportion of pre-school
children (younger than age 5) injured on playground equipment
was higher on home playgrounds than on playgrounds in general.
Almost 40
percent of those injured at home were younger than 5 years, as
compared with about 27 percent on other playgrounds.
"Children should be out on the playground where they belong,
not in the hospital emergency room, " said CPSC Chairman
Ann Brown. "We
believe that by sharing our simple safety tips with parents, home
playgrounds can be a place where kids have fun and play safely."
"Years of advocacy for safe public playgrounds has helped
raise standards for those play spaces with the intention to lower
injuries
to children," said Darell Hammond, co-founder and CEO of
KaBOOM!, a non- profit organization based in Washington, D.C..
"Now, it's time to
use our experience, and print and Internet resources, to make
families aware of the dangers too often posed by home playsets."
CPSC and KaBOOM! are teaming up to reduce playground hazards
by providing parents with safety information. Parents are encouraged
to
install and maintain protective surfacing, eliminate unsafe ropes
and check for potentially hazardous hooks and edges on swings
and slides
on home playgrounds.
CPSC's study found that only 9 percent of home playgrounds had
protective, shock-absorbing surfacing. Dirt and grass, which are
the
most prevalent surfaces under home playground equipment, do not
adequately protect children from serious head injuries.
To help prevent injuries from falls and other hazards on home
playgrounds, the following safety tips are recommended:
* Install and maintain at least 9 inches of wood chips, mulch,
or shredded rubber for play equipment up to 7 feet high. If sand
or pea
gravel is used, install at least a 9-inch layer for play equipment
up to 5 feet high. Or, use surfacing mats made of safety-tested
rubber
or rubber-like materials.
* Install protective surfacing at least six feet in all directions
from play equipment. For swings, the surface should extend, in
back
and front, twice the height of the suspending bar.
* Never attach ropes, jump ropes, clotheslines, or pet leashes
to the equipment. This can present a serious strangulation hazard
to
children.
* Smooth sharp points or edges, and cover open "S"
hooks or protruding bolts.
* Check for openings in guardrails or between ladder rungs. Spaces
should be either less than 3 1/2 inches or more than 9 inches
so that
they don't present an entrapment hazard.
* Always supervise young children to make sure they are safe.
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