Babysitter Guidelines
If possible, it is a good idea to interview a potential babysitter
before letting him or her care for your children. The interview is
a great way to make sure you find the right person to care for
your children. Arrange for the sitter to meet your children before
babysitting if possible.
It helps to go over some guidelines with babysitters, both at the
interview and when you leave the house. This gives the babysitter
a better idea of what you expect. Take a tour of the house and
point out where to find first aid supplies, fire extinguishers,
toys, clothing, snacks, and other items. Talk about the fire
escape plan and emergency exits. Make sure the sitter knows CPR
and has first aid training.
Here is the information to provide to anyone who will take care of
your children while you are away:
- Your family name, phone number, address, and the nearest cross
street.
- Where you will be, how you can be reached, and when you will
return.
- Important phone numbers: police, fire, poison control center,
hospital, children's doctor, ambulance. Post near the phone.
- The name and phone number of a nearby friend, neighbor, or
relative.
- Children's names, ages, weights, and any food allergies or
medical conditions.
- Rules about friends visiting, TV and computer use, how to
answer the telephone, outdoor play, smoking, and snacks. (Talk
about rules that apply to both the children and to the
sitter.)
- Warnings about not opening the door to strangers and hanging
up immediately on crank callers.
- Instructions about feeding and bathing.
- Special instructions about such things as child's fears,
favorite play activities, or family pets.
- Bedtime routines such as brushing teeth, washing hands,
favorite bedtime story, light on or off, door open or closed.
- How to handle misbehavior.
- Rules for play and places the children should avoid, such as
the garage, basement, office, or swimming pool.
Make sure that the sitter never leaves young children unattended,
especially while the child is in a high chair, walker, bath, or
stroller.
Written by Donna Warner Manczak, PhD, MPH.
Published by
RelayHealth.
Last modified: 2009-01-09
Last reviewed: 2008-12-29
This content is reviewed periodically and is subject to
change as new health information becomes available. The
information is intended to inform and educate and is not a
replacement for medical evaluation, advice, diagnosis or
treatment by a healthcare professional.
© 2009 RelayHealth and/or its affiliates. All Rights Reserved.