Join Us for a Day of Social Media Conversation July 31 Is National
Transcription
Join Us for a Day of Social Media Conversation July 31 Is National
Join Us for a Day of Social Media Conversation July 31 Is National Heatstroke Prevention Day. Your Quick Action Can Save a Young Life. Problem: A child dies from heatstroke about once every 10 days from being left alone in a hot vehicle. In fact, heatstroke is the leading cause of non-crash vehicle fatality for kids 14 and younger. Children climb into unlocked cars to play, or are left alone in the car. These are tragedies that are 100 percent preventable. Action: NHTSA is asking you to help us raise awareness about the dangers of kids and cars through a concerted day- long social media conversation. NHTSA is reaching out to our State and safety partners to tweet and post on Facebook every hour on the hour from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. @NHTSA.gov will be using the hash tag #heatstroke on all its social media posts and asks you to do the same. As we approach rising summer temperatures, the dangers for kids left in hot vehicles increases exponentially. Sample social media posts: zz No child should die of #heatstroke from being left alone in a hot car! Share this badge if you want to help stop this 100-percentpreventable tragedy. zz If you see a child alone in a hot vehicle, call 911 or your local emergency number immediately. If the child is in distress due to heat, get that child out as quickly as possible. Cool the child rapidly by spraying the child with cool water or with water from a garden hose (an ice bath isn’t necessary nor desirable). Visit www.safercar.gov/heatstroke for more information. zz A child’s body absorbs more heat on a hot day than an adult’s does. Where’s Baby? Look before you lock! #heatstroke zz High body temperatures can cause a child permanent injury or even death. Where’s Baby? Look before you lock! #heatstroke zz 10 minutes is all the time it takes for a car to reach deadly temperatures w/ a child locked inside. www.safekids.org/heatstroke Pls RT zz Remember to never leave your child alone in a car – even for a minute! Please RT www.safekids.org/heatstroke #heatstroke zz San Francisco State Univ.: 52% of cases, child was “forgotten” by the caregiver. Where’s Baby? Look before you lock! #heatstroke zz Did u know? In more than 29% of cases, kids got into vehicles on their own. Where’s Baby? Look before you lock! #heatstroke zz Want to help us prevent #heatstroke deaths of children in hot vehicle? Visit www.safercar. gov/heatstroke 9822-071113-v2a heatstroke/hypertherm a heatstroke/hypertherm a NEVER LEAVE A CHILD ALONE IN A VEHICLE NEVER LEAVE A CHILD ALONE IN A VEHICLE If You See a Child Unattended in a Car, Don’t Hesitate to CALL 911 – it Is That Serious. The ______________________________ welcomes and supports the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration’s (NHTSA) “Where’s baby? Look before you lock” and Safe Kids Worldwide ACT campaigns, which educate p arents and caregivers about the risks of leaving children unattended in a vehicle – even for just a few moments. WHERE’S BABY? N E V E R L E AV E A C H I L D A L N E . Every year, children die of heatstroke, also known as hyperthermia, while unattended in vehicles. The number of near - misses – children rescued before a fatality – is significantly higher. With concerted effort the Alliance, NHTSA and Safe Kids Worldwide offer preventable tips on needless child heatstroke deaths in vehicles. Made possible by the Alliance of Automobile Manufacturers, Inc. For More Information Visit: For More Information Visit: http://www.nhtsa.gov/safety/hyperthermia or http://www.nhtsa.gov/safety/hyperthermia or http://www.safekids.org/safety-basics/safety-guide/ kids-in-and-around-cars/never-leave-your-child-alone.html http://www.safekids.org/safety-basics/safety-guide/ kids-in-and-around-cars/never-leave-your-child-alone.html Why Children Are At Risk: Sun and Heat Once a vehicle is parked, temperatures skyrocket. Why does this happen? WHY CHILDREN ARE AT RISK heatstroke/hypertherm a NEVER LEAVE A CHILD ALONE IN A VEHICLE Their small bodies absorb heat more quickly. Perspiration doesn’t cool infants and children as well as adults. They can’t change their environment. They can’t remove clothing or get out of the vehicle. WHAT DOESN’T WORK SOLAR RADIATION passes through windows heating the interior. PRIOR AIR-CONDITIONING does little to prevent tempatures from rising. In five minutes, the car’s interior temperature r eaches that of outside air. Safe Kids Worldwide Encourages Us to USE These Prevention Tips and ACT: A LEAVING WINDOWS OPEN doesn’t prevent the child from overheating. Closed windows = AVOID • Never leave your child alone in the car, even for a minute. • Consistently lock unattended vehicle doors and trunks. 140° Windows left 1.5 inches open Temperature outside FAHRENHEIT LONGWAVE RADIATION is generated from heated objects. It is trapped inside the vehicle, heating the air. 130° 120° 110° 100° 90° MINUTES C T = CREATE REMINDERS = TAKE ACTION • Create reminders and habits that give you and your child’s caregiver a safety net. • Establish a peace-of-mind plan: call or text all other caregivers, so all of you know where your child is at all times. • Put your cellphone, laptop or something else that you will need at your destination in the back seat to make sure that you have to look before leaving the vehicle. • Dial 911 immediately and follow the instructions that emergency personnel provide – they are trained to determine if a child is in danger. 80° HEALTH OUTCOME 0 10 20 30 40 50 60 THE LEVEL OF HEAT ILLNESS VARIES • • • • Length of time trapped in vehicle Time of day Child health status Car and child in direct sunlight STAGES OF HEAT ILLNESS Heat stress is a mild physical discomfort and physiologic strain. Heat exhaustion is caused by dehydration when a child’s temperature reaches 104 degrees. It leads to intense thirst, weakness, discomfort, anxiety, dizziness, f ainting and headache. Heatstroke or hyperthermia, is a life-threatening condition where the child’s temperature rises more than 104 degrees, causing delirium, convulsions, c oma and death. SOURCES: Sun Sentinel “Hyperthermia deaths of children of vehicles,” Jan Null, CCM, Department of Geoscience, San Francisco State University, ggweather.com/heat; “Quantifying the heat-related hazard for children in motor vehicles,” Andrew Grundstein, John Dowd, Vernon Meentemeyer, American Meteorological Society; “Heat Stress from enclosed vehicles: Moderate Ambient temperatures cause significant temperature rise in enclosed vehicles,” Catherine McLaren, MD, Jan Null, CCM and James Quinn, MC Pediatrics HEAT CONVECTION contributes to the rise in temperature.