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Backstroke Ban
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Building
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Swimming &
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Your
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Learn to Swim Award
Mother & Child Drown
Poem -
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Stretching
For Streamlining
Taking the
Plunge
Swimming Pool Safety for Children
Swimming With Dolphins
Teach
Baby to Swim?
Teaching Swimming
Toddler
Drowning
Up the
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Winded
and Weary?
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Swimming Pool Safety for Children
A swimming pool in the yard can
be very dangerous for children. If possible, do not put a swimming pool in
your yard until your children are older than 5 years. If you already have
a pool, protect your children from drowning by doing the following:
-
Never leave your children
alone in or near the pool, even for a moment.
-
You must put up a fence to
separate your house from the pool. Most young children who drown in
pools wander out of the house and fall into the pool. Install a fence at
least 4 feet high around all 4 sides of the pool. This fence will
completely separate the pool from the house and play area of the yard.
Use gates that self-close and self-latch, with latches higher than your
children's reach.
-
A power safety cover that
meets the standards of the American Society for Testing and Materials
(ASTM) adds to the protection of your children but should not be used in
place of the fence between your house and the pool. Even fencing around
your pool and using a power safety cover will not prevent all drownings.
-
Keep rescue equipment (such as
a shepherd's hook or life preserver) and a telephone by the pool.
-
Do not let your child use
air-filled "swimming aids" because they are not a substitute for
approved life vests and can be dangerous.
-
Anyone watching young children
around a pool should learn CPR and be able to rescue a child if needed.
Stay within an arm's length of your child.
-
Remove all toys from the pool
after use so children aren't tempted to reach for them.
-
After the children are done
swimming, secure the pool so they can't get back into it.
Remember, teaching your child
how to swim DOES NOT mean your child is safe in water.
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