Burns: Prevention
Follow these guidelines to protect your child from common burns.
- Never drink anything hot (such as coffee, tea, or cocoa) when
you are holding a baby. The baby will reach for it, spill it,
and probably get burned.
- Try to use the back burners of a stove and keep panhandles
turned toward the back of the stove.
- After your child can walk, keep hot liquids and appliances
(such as a pan of boiling water, a coffee pot, a curling iron,
or an iron) away from the edge of a table, counter, or stove.
A burn from a crockpot usually causes scarring because the
contents are sticky and very hot.
- Do not allow children to use the microwave without
supervision.
- Lower your hot-water heater setting to 120°F (49°C) or the
"low" setting. Water heated at higher settings can cause burns
in 2 or 3 seconds. You can test the temperature of your hot
water by using a candy or meat thermometer.
- Always test the temperature of bath water before your child
gets into the tub. Supervise young children in the bathtub.
Don't let a young child touch the faucet handles. He or she
may turn on the hot water and be scalded.
- Use cool humidifiers, not hot steam vaporizers. A vaporizer
can cause severe burns if a child overturns it or puts his
face too close to it.
- Supervise children around fires, stoves, and heaters of any
kind.
- Use flame-resistant sleepwear.
- Give up smoking, or at least carefully dispose of used
cigarettes. Cigarettes are the most common cause of fires in
homes.
- Keep matches and cigarette lighters away from children. Even a
2-year-old child can ignite a lighter by turning it upside
down and pushing it across the floor.
- Check electrical plugs and cords to see if they are frayed. Do
not overload electrical outlets.
- Install smoke detectors in your home on every floor. Check
them monthly for proper functioning. More people die from
smoke inhalation than from burns. Smoke alarms detect smoke
long before your nose can.
- Teach your children not to hide if a fire occurs in the house.
Teach them to go outside. Rehearse and have a fire drill.
- Teach children what to do if their clothes catch on fire.
Stop, drop, roll, and shout for help. If they get burned, they
should cool the burns with cool water, NOT ice.
- Before you place a child less than 1 year old in a car seat,
check the seat's temperature. Hot straps or buckles can cause
second-degree burns. Whenever you park in direct sunlight,
cover the car seat with a towel or sheet.
- Avoid fireworks, or allow older children to use them only with
close adult supervision. In addition to burns, fireworks
(especially bottle rockets) cause 300 cases of blindness per
year.
Written by B.D. Schmitt, MD, author of "Your Child's Health," Bantam Books.
Published by
RelayHealth.
Last modified: 2007-04-19
Last reviewed: 2008-06-09
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.
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