Choking: Prevention
Choking can be life-threatening. Choking on foods or other objects
kills as many children each year as accidental poisonings. Follow
these guidelines to help prevent your child from choking.
- Do not give hard foods to children less than 4 years old. Hard
foods that could be sucked into the lungs when a child takes a
breath are nuts, sunflower seeds, orange seeds, cherry pits,
watermelon seeds, gum, hard candies, popcorn, some corn chips,
raw carrots, raw peas, and raw celery. Children under the age
of 4 years don't know which foods they should spit out. They
also need more molar teeth to chew the other hard foods
properly.
- Chop up dangerous soft foods before you serve them. Soft foods
that most commonly cause fatal choking by completely blocking
the windpipe are hot dogs, sausage, gummy candy, large pieces
of any meat, grapes, and caramels (especially if a child is in
a hurry).
- Warn babysitters and older siblings not to share these
dangerous hard and soft foods with small children.
- Teach your child to chew all foods thoroughly before
swallowing them.
- Don't allow your child to fill his cheeks with food like a
chipmunk.
- Clean up right away after parties. An especially dangerous
time is the morning after parties, when a toddler may find
dangerous foods on the floor.
- Warn your child never to chew or suck on pieces of rubber
balloons. Rubber balloons are the leading cause of choking
deaths resulting from objects other than foods. Most incidents
occur when a child suddenly inhales a deflated balloon he has
been chewing on. Even teenagers have died from inhaling a
deflated balloon. Chewing on an inflated balloon is also
dangerous because the balloon could burst. Mylar helium
balloons are safer than rubber balloons, but rubber balloons
are fine when they are used with supervision.
- Don't give a young child a toy with small, detachable parts.
If you do, in a few minutes you'll find the missing part in
the child's mouth (unless he has already swallowed it).
- Periodically check your child's environment for small objects
that your child could choke on (anything with a diameter less
than 1.25 inch, or 3.2 cm). Ask older children to protect
younger siblings by checking the carpet for coins or small
pieces from toys or games.
- Dispose of button batteries carefully.
- Remind your child not to run or play sports with gum or other
material in his mouth.
- Keep a watchful eye on children who are eating and playing.
Written by B.D. Schmitt, MD, author of "Your Child's Health," Bantam Books.
Published by
RelayHealth.
Last modified: 2007-05-03
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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