[blparent] Swimming pools at home

Pipi blahblahblah0822 at gmail.com
Wed Jun 22 14:52:27 UTC 2011


I take care of my 8 and 12 year old niece and nephew. Even though they get 
mad at me, I stick by the rule that children under 16 will not swim without 
an adult present. When it is me being the adult, I am in the pool with them, 
or sitting with my feet on the side. I have some usable sight, but still 
have taught them that when I call out, they will answer, or we are done.
As for Savannah at 2 1/2 going swimming, I'm probably way over protective, 
but oh well. I don't allow many to take her in the pool. She is afraid of 
inflatable things, so I've never been able to use the baby toys or floaties 
with her.I've started teaching her the basics of swimming, and as soon as 
she is old enough, she will have lessons.
We do have a portable pool in our yard. There is no fence around it, but I 
dump it after use. It's a very small pool just for Savannah. We don't swim 
everyday. Safety is more important than my water bill.
Water fun is one area that scares me and I will take the extra precautions 
to make it an enjoyable and safe time for all involved.

Just my thoughts.
Pipi
----- Original Message ----- 
From: "Jo Elizabeth Pinto" <jopinto at msn.com>
To: "NFBnet Blind Parents Mailing List" <blparent at nfbnet.org>
Sent: Wednesday, June 22, 2011 1:09 AM
Subject: Re: [blparent] Swimming pools at home


> Please, please, everybody read this and take it to heart.  I have a friend 
> who is very close to a couple whose ten-year-old little girl nearly 
> drowned this summer.  It was in a swimming pool at an apartment complex, 
> and the parents were keeping an eye on the child but also moving boxes and 
> furniture out of an apartment at the same time.  The little girl was only 
> under water a few minutes, and her dad knew CPR and started it as soon as 
> she was pulled out.  But she was on a ventillator for quite a while, and 
> now it's a very slow recovery process in the hospital.  Her mind seems to 
> be intact, but she will probably end up blind and with severe damage to 
> her motor skills.  It's all very sad, and it happened so quickly. 
> Supervision can't be stressed enough.  And also teaching your kids how to 
> swim, at least enough to save themselves and not to panic, is crucial.
>
> My 15-year-old stepson doesn't know how to swim, and it scares me to 
> death. I won't take him and Sarah to the pool without a sighted person. 
> Sarah I could put in her Water Wings and stay close to her and we'd be 
> fine, but both of them would be too much for me.  I took them to the local 
> water park last week, and even though there were lifeguards on duty, I 
> brought along a teenager--I paid for her gas and her ticket into the park. 
> She knows Sarah well.  I told Stephen and the teenage girl that they could 
> trade off, so each of them could do the water slides on their own, but 
> that the rule was, one of them had to have their eyes on Sarah at all 
> times, period.  The girl said I was paranoid, there were a lot of 
> lifeguards.  I told her she'd be a mom someday, and then she'd understand, 
> but for the moment she just better accept that I had the right to be 
> paranoid, and that it wouldn't change. Especially with poor Hannah 
> drowning this summer, and all I've seen that family go through, you just 
> can't be too careful.  I see moms in the complex here sending their 
> elementary age children to the pool with their preschool age siblings all 
> the time, and it scares me to no end.
>
> Two bits worth of free advice and anecdotes,
> Jo Elizabeth
>
> "The only thing we have to fear is fear itself--nameless, unreasoning, 
> unjustified terror which paralyzes needed efforts to convert retreat into 
> advance."--Franklin D. Roosevelt
>
> --------------------------------------------------
> From: "Veronica Smith" <madison_tewe at spinn.net>
> Sent: Tuesday, June 21, 2011 9:47 PM
> To: "'NFBnet Blind Parents Mailing List'" <blparent at nfbnet.org>
> Subject: [blparent] Swimming pools at home
>
>>
>> Tots can drown in portable swimming pools, too
>>
>> By Liz Szabo, USA TODAY
>>
>> Portable pools pose a greater safety threat to small children than many
>> parents realize, a new study suggests.
>>
>> About two dozen children each year drown in portable pools, according to 
>> a
>> study published today in Pediatrics. Nearly all are under age 5.
>>
>> Unlike permanent pools, portable pools aren't typically required to meet 
>> any
>> local safety standards, says study author Gary Smith, director of the 
>> Center
>> for Injury Research and Policy at Nationwide Children's Hospital in
>> Columbus, Ohio.
>>
>> Smith notes that portable pools are increasingly popular and come in all
>> sizes. Hard-plastic wading pools, which hold about 18 inches of water, 
>> may
>> cost only a few dollars at a local drugstore. Family-size, inflatable 
>> pools,
>> nearly as large as a small, in-ground pool, can cost closer to $1,000, he
>> says.
>>
>> These pools pose unique risks, says Meri-K Appy,  president of Safe Kids
>> USA, an advocacy group. Few people, for example, are willing to invest in
>> building a safety fence around a portable pool  one of the best ways to
>> prevent drownings  because a fence could cost more than the pool itself.
>>
>> These pools are too small for people to invest in an isolation fence but 
>> too
>> large to drain every time," Appy says.
>>
>> About 11% of all pool drowning deaths in kids under 5 take place in 
>> portable
>> pools,  the Consumer Product Safety Commission says.
>>
>> Children drowned in as little as 2 inches of water, according to the 
>> study,
>> based on data from a total of 209 deaths from 2001 to 2009.
>>
>> About 43% of the children were being supervised when they went under 
>> water;
>> 39% were unsupervised; and 18% of kids died during a "lapse" in 
>> supervision.
>>
>>
>> Parents don't always understand that it just takes a couple of minutes 
>> for
>> children to be submerged under water for their breathing and heart to 
>> stop,"
>> Smith says. What's different about drowning is that it's quick, it's 
>> silent
>> and it's final.
>>
>> When supervising kids in the water, Appy says, caregivers need to give
>> children their full attention and be only an arm's length away. Children
>> have died at swimming parties, surrounded by others, because adults 
>> weren't
>> within reach.
>>
>> Drowning is the leading cause of death from unintentional injuries in
>> children ages 1 to 4, causing 29% of these deaths  more even than traffic
>> accidents, says the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. They
>> include not only pools and lakes but bathtubs. Parents also should learn
>> CPR, or cardiopulmonary resuscitation, says Susan Baker, professor with 
>> the
>> Johns Hopkins Center for Injury Research and Policy. The study notes that
>> few parents even attempted CPR, perhaps because they doubted their 
>> skills.
>>
>>
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