Back-to-School Safety: 5 Questions Parents Should Ask to Keep Kids Safe & Healthy Before & After School by 30Seconds Health

Safety
5 years ago

More than 50 million children across the U.S. will go back to public school in the coming weeks. Between back-to-school shopping, finalizing classes and meeting teachers, the National Safety Council urges parents to slow down and ask themselves five simple questions that directly impact children's and teens' safety:

  • How is my child getting to school?
  • Does my child have the right backpack?
  • Is the playground equipment safe?
  • Are coaches trained to spot the signs of a concussion?
  • Does my child get enough sleep?

Data indicate too few people may consider these issues. Weekday fatal crashes involving teen drivers, for example, peak in the hours before and after school. Loading and unloading is the most dangerous time for students who ride a school bus. Backpacks injure as many as 14,000 children each year. More than 200,000 children go to emergency rooms because of playground-related injuries annually, concussion diagnoses are on the rise and 15 percent of teens do not get enough sleep on school nights.

"We would never forget back-to-school supplies, but we tend to overlook safety," said Deborah A.P. Hersman, president and CEO of the National Safety Council. "While unintentional injury deaths are the leading cause of fatalities involving school-age children, we often spend more time discussing first-day-of-school outfits than safety."

To help ensure a safer back-to-school season, the National Safety Council recommends:

  • Riding the bus. Children are 70 times more likely to get to school safely by taking the bus rather than riding in a car. The National Safety Council urges parents to put their children on the bus and calls on all states to pass laws requiring three-point seat belts on all buses to maximize safety.
  • Avoiding teen carpools. A single young passenger increases a teen driver's fatal crash risk 44 percent. If teens drive to school, they should do so alone – no friends or siblings should ride with them.
  • Walking attentively and in groups. On average one child dies a day after being hit by a car in the U.S. These preventable deaths increase sharply after school and remain high through the evening, peaking in October. Children and teens should avoid texting while walking, remove headphones before crossing the street, use designated crosswalks and never assume a vehicle will stop.
  • Buying the right backpack. A backpack should not weigh more than 5 to 10 percent of a child's weight. It should never be wider or longer than your child's torso, and never hang lower than 4 inches from the waist. Padded straps, hip and chest belts, multiple compartments and compression straps can also help. Parents should have children clean out their backpacks regularly and remove unnecessary items.
  • Checking the playground. Most playground injuries are related to falls or problems with equipment. Parents should look for hazards like cracks, rust, splits in wood, sharp edges, tripping hazards, platforms without guardrails or loose bolts. Equipment should stand on either rubber, sand or wood chips – never on pavement. Notify the school immediately if anything looks unsafe.
  • Advocating for concussion education. Every three minutes, a child is treated in the emergency room for a sports-related concussion. Check with school leadership to ensure coaches are educated about the signs and symptoms of a concussion.
  • Planning around sleep schedules. School-aged children need nine to 11 hours of sleep each night, and teens need eight to 10 hours. Sleep deprivation can lead to serious issues including inability to concentrate in class, lower test scores, stunted growth and acne. Fatigued teens are at increased risk of a car crash. Plan school and extracurricular activities so they do not impact children's ability to get enough sleep.

For additional back-to-school safety information and tips for parents visit NSC.org/backtoschool. This video is longer than 30 seconds, but we think it's worth it.

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