What to know about water safety before heading to the beach or pool this summer

Safe Kids Worldwide says 973 children under age 19 drowned in the U.S. in 2021.

What to know about water safety before heading to the beach or pool this summer

FORT LAUDERDALE, Fla. — With school out for the summer and temperatures rising across the country, many families will visit the beach, lake or local swimming pool. Now is the time to review safety tips to keep children safe around water.

Drowning is the leading cause of death for children ages 1 to 4 and the second leading cause of unintentional death for children in the 5 to 14 age group, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

In the United States, 973 children under the age of 19 drowned in 2021, and another 6,500 were treated in emergency rooms following near drowning incidents, according to Gary Karton of Safe Kids Worldwide, a nonprofit organization working to prevent childhood injury.

In fact, more drownings occur in the summer, and specifically in July, than any other time of the year, according to the Children's Hospital of Pittsburgh.

Palm Beach County Ocean Rescue lifeguard Daniel Barnickel said there always should be an adult monitoring the water.

“As a whole, never swim alone," he said.

Taking the time to go over safety procedures and rules before heading to the pool or beach can benefit children and their parents.

If you have a backyard pool

The most important safety feature of a backyard swimming pool is a barrier, such as a safety fence, to prevent unsupervised access to the water.

Many children who drowned at home did so during times they were not expected to be in the water, according to the American Red Cross. In some cases, children were out of sight for less than five minutes and in the care of one or both parents when they slipped into the pool and drowned, the agency said.

That said, it is vital to make sure children learn to swim. There are many programs that teach children to swim, including Red Cross swimming courses across the U.S.

If a child goes missing, remember that seconds count. Check the water first, safety experts advise. It's also important to have appropriate equipment available at home. This includes something to throw into the water for a child to grab onto, a cell phone to call for help, life jackets and a first aid kit.

Skills children should learn to prevent drowning

All children should learn to step or jump into water that's above their head and safely return to the surface and also be able to float or tread water, according to Safe Kids Worldwide.

They should also be able to quickly turn around in the water and find a safe place, combine breathing with moving forward in the water and get out of the water.

Create a safe environment

If several adults are at the pool, beach or lake with a group of children, choose a water watcher who can have eyes on the children at all times. It's a great idea to rotate the water watcher among the adults for brief amounts of time, such as 15-minute intervals, experts at Safe Kids Worldwide recommend.

While at the pool or around water, it's advisable to avoid distractions. Put away phones, books and magazines, because drowning is often silent and can happen in less than five minutes.

When you're finished swimming, make sure to remove all floats and pool toys so young children won't be enticed to reach for them.

Teach children to stay away from pool drains or suction devices, which can entrap swimmers' hair or limbs.

Since 2014, all public pools and spas in the U.S. have been required to comply with the Virginia Graeme Baker Pool & Spa Safety Act, which was named after a 7-year-old girl who died after being caught by the strong suction of a hot tub drain in 2002. Her mother lobbied Congress to require drain covers and other pool safety features.

But even with those safety elements, experts say it’s a good practice to check the drains and devices before children get into a pool.

More water safety tips

Always swim with a buddy, or in an area supervised by a lifeguard.

“Make sure that you don’t overestimate your abilities,” Barnickel said. “Know your limits.”

Have young or inexperienced children wear U.S. Coast Guard-approved life jackets. The size of the life jacket should be based on the child's height and weight. Never substitute arm floaties or inflatable swimming rings for life jackets.

The best practice is to keep children within an arm's reach of an adult at all times when in the water and teach them to always ask permission to go near the water.

Enforce safety rules, including no running or pushing on the pool deck and no dunking people in the water. It's also a good idea to keep them from chewing gum or eating while swimming or jumping in the water.

Experts also recommend making sure children know the depth of the water so they don't dive into the shallow end and get injured.

Swimming in open water

Open water, such as the ocean or a lake, is much different than a backyard swimming pool.

Children need to understand there can be limited visibility and uneven surfaces in the ocean and lakes. They also need to be taught about currents and undertow, which can pull them under water and away from the shore.

“Year after year in South Florida, rip currents claim more lives than every weather-related hazard combined,” Barnickel said. “We’ve seen locals come here that have been going to the beach their whole life, and they’ve never been caught in a rip current, or they think that they have and they know what to do. And they’ll get pulled out into a rip current. We’ll go out and get them, and they say, ‘I can’t believe that happened.’"

When at a beach or lake, it's important to use designated swimming or recreational areas. Watch for signs posted about water hazards, as well as the times that lifeguards will be present.

[video_shortcode_youtube src="https://www.youtube.com/embed/5UkOLTde-Y0?rel=0" itemprop="image" content="https://www.youtube.com/embed/5UkOLTde-Y0?rel=0" data-src="https://www.youtube.com/embed/5UkOLTde-Y0?rel=0"]

OTHER NEWS

14 minutes ago

Cowboys face major Dak Prescott problem

14 minutes ago

Contract length a huge sticking point for Steelers and Cam Heyward

17 minutes ago

‘NEETS' and ‘new unemployables' — why some young adults aren't working

19 minutes ago

Sonic Drive-In enters fast-food value meal wars with $1.99 menu to lure in inflation-rocked customers

19 minutes ago

North Carolina conservative activists attempting to flip GOP’s view on early voting in the swing state

19 minutes ago

ANC postpones Gauteng cabinet announcement after DA rejects unity provincial government

19 minutes ago

POPCRU weighs in on the appointment of Pieter Groenewald

19 minutes ago

Paul Finebaum Clarifies Bold Arch Manning Comments

19 minutes ago

Kylian Mbappe celebrates in Jan Vertonghen's face minutes after heated exchange... after the Belgian defender accused the France captain of diving during Euro 2024 last-16 clash

20 minutes ago

Jimmy Anderson to mentor England’s bowlers after final Test appearance

20 minutes ago

Bucs' Offensive Line Disrespected in Rankings

20 minutes ago

Hurricane Beryl gains power as it nears populated Caribbean islands

20 minutes ago

‘Lorch and Hotto’s beef affected the team’ Pirates defender reveals

20 minutes ago

Hotel Inspector Alex Polizzi's faces backlash after one-word remark to staff

20 minutes ago

Patriots LB Matthew Judon Contract ‘Worth Watching?’

20 minutes ago

Could Zeke Lose Starting Job to Rico?

20 minutes ago

9 games live on TV across this week's GAA inter-county schedule

20 minutes ago

KwaZulu-Natal Athletics names and shames Comrades Marathon cheats

21 minutes ago

Georgia QB Carson Beck embraces 'pressure situations' at helm of Bulldogs

21 minutes ago

Ravens News 7/1: Open-Target Rate

21 minutes ago

Team India stuck in Barbados as Hurricane Beryl disrupts travel plans for T20 World Cup winners

21 minutes ago

Chiefs' Biggest Training Camp 'Concern' Revealed

21 minutes ago

Chinese brands to reach a third of global new car sales by 2030 - report

21 minutes ago

Wanted: 200,000 Aussies to design, deploy and sell AI

21 minutes ago

Ronaldo leads changed Portugal against Slovenia in Euro 2024 last 16

21 minutes ago

AMD may be doing something unprecedented with Ryzen 9000

21 minutes ago

Donald Trump's 2-Sentence Response to Supreme Court Ruling

21 minutes ago

Nalagarh BJP candidate a ‘sold-out’ bizman who stabbed Congress Govt: Himachal CM

21 minutes ago

Arrest made after six people rescued by firefighters during tower block blaze

21 minutes ago

US Supreme Court grants Trump substantial immunity from prosecution

21 minutes ago

Eritrea's Biniam Girmay becomes the first Black rider to win a Tour de France stage

21 minutes ago

Japan Aerospace Exploration Agency Launches H3 Rocket

21 minutes ago

Pedro Pascal: I'd ‘Rather Be Thrown from a Building' Than Fight Paul Mescal Again After ‘Gladiator II' Production

21 minutes ago

Golden Knights make pair of depth signings

21 minutes ago

‘Slapping therapist encouraged follower not to take lifesaving insulin’

21 minutes ago

Messi injury update: Back to practice with Argentina, will he make Copa América return?

21 minutes ago

Clarence Thomas swipes at Special Counsel Jack Smith's appointment in SCOTUS immunity case

21 minutes ago

Emma Raducanu proves her point in Wimbledon win after getting huge slice of luck

21 minutes ago

BREAKING: Flames Sign Devin Cooley; Create Bay Area Native Crease

21 minutes ago

I bought the cheapest Surface Pro Copilot+ PC - here are my 3 takeaways as a Windows expert