Keep your kids safe around pools and spas

Here’s a sobering statistic: Nearly 400 children under the age of 15 drown in pools and spas every year — about one every day. Of those, 300 are under the age of 5. The majority of these fatalities occur at residential pools and spas.

This is according to Ellyn Pollack, campaign leader for Pool Safely, a public education campaign run by the Consumer Product Safety Commission (CPSC) that works to reduce child drownings and other incidents in swimming pools and spas. “Drowning is the leading cause of unintentional death for 1- to 4-year-olds, and every one of them is preventable,” she says.

The best way to prevent pool accidents is to implement multiple layers of protection: adult supervision, safety barriers, door and pool alarms, regular inspections, and training like swim lessons and CPR. If you own a pool or spa, or are thinking of building one, here’s what you can do to keep your kids safe.

Teach Kids to Swim

Learning to swim is not only good exercise for children or a fun way to pass the summer, but the real benefit is that it can save their lives. Kids who don’t know how to swim have a 70 percent higher chance of drowning, Pollack says. “Also, it’s important that if a child is missing, the pool or spa is the first place to check,” she says.

Designate a Water Watcher

There is no better safety measure than adult supervision. Pollack recommends that people designate one adult to be solely responsible for watching kids in swimming pools and spas. “Not someone who is texting or reading,” she says. You can order a free water watcher badge and lanyard through the Pool Safely website. “Give an adult the badge and have them work in 15- or 30-minute shifts, then pass it along to another adult,” she says. Drowning is not like in the movies. “There’s no splashing and calling for help,” Pollack says, “kids go down quickly and silently.”

Implement Barriers and Other Safety Measures

Even if you don’t have kids, it’s recommended, and in many jurisdictions required, that you still provide some sort of barrier around your pool, whether it’s a fence or safety net. You never know when your friends might bring their kids over to swim or a neighborhood kid decides to wander over to check out your pool.

Fences

Fences come in a variety of styles and materials, but they should be at least 4 feet high (5 feet is better) and unable to be climbed. The gate should be self-closing and self-latching, and it should swing away from the pool so that kids aren’t able to push it open if it fails to latch.

Fences should be see-through, such as chain-link, wrought iron or glass, and they shouldn’t have any footholds or niches that kids can use to climb over.

Jackie Barrera is with D&D Technologies, a company that makes magnetic safety gate latches and gate alarms for pools. The company was one of the founding fathers, so to speak, of the National Drowning Prevention Alliance, which works with Pool Safely and other outreach programs to spread awareness on pool safety measures.

Barrera says that, because every state and local jurisdiction has different levels of regulation on pool safety for things like barriers, the responsibility often falls on the homeowner to be educated on what can and should be done to keep kids safe around pools, and to make sure that the products they’re buying are in line with regulations. For more on height regulations and other key measurements for constructing safe fences and barriers, check out the Pool Safely website.

Safety nets and mesh covers

These have come into use in the past 15 years or so and work by securing a net or mesh cover to anchors around your pool. They require a little time to put on and take off, so they’re better for people who use their pool or spa less often.

Installation takes only a day. Some people find them a bit more aesthetically pleasing than fences because they visually impact the surrounding landscape less, though they do obscure the views of the water.

Door alarms

It’s recommended that even if you have a fence, safety net or automatic cover, you should still get an alarm for any door leading to your pool area. This is especially important if your house acts as the fourth side to the barrier surrounding your pool. These alarms should have a distinct sound, Pollack says, that’s different from other door alarms in your home, the doorbell or telephone. That way, you’ll know immediately when the pool door has been opened.

Also, don’t forget about pet doors. Curious kids can easily slip through the openings, and some local jurisdictions require that doors leading to pool areas not have pet doors.

Pool alarms

Another type of alarm is the pool alarm. These detect waves or movement in the water so you know when something or someone has fallen in.

Update Pool Drain Covers

Drain entrapment and electrical shorts are also serious concerns. A Pool Safely campaign was established as part of the Virginia Graeme Baker Pool and Safety Act (VGB), named for the 7-year-old daughter of Nancy and James Baker IV, the son of former Secretary of State James Baker III. Virginia Graeme drowned after becoming stuck in a hot tub drain, despite being a member of her community swim and diving team. Nancy Baker was unable to pull her daughter from the drain. Virginia died from drowning, but the real cause of her death was suction entrapment due to a faulty drain cover. After that, Baker advocated for pool and spa safety, and eventually lobbied Congress to pass a law requiring anti-entrapment drain covers and other safety devices.

According to Terry Snow, outreach chairman of the Independent Pool and Spa Association; he suggests that pool and spa industry professionals recognize the need for safer drains, and provides several additional steps that parents can take to avoid entrapment hazards:

“Since 2008, swimming pools and spas are being retrofitted and designed to comply with the Virginia Graeme Baker Pool and Spa Safety Act. Today’s drain covers are built with new standards. This has made the covers stronger and safer.”

If you move into a home with a pool or are installing one, it’s important that you check to make sure that the drains are anti-entrapment and compliant with VGB. If they aren’t, replacing them isn’t too expensive, and you don’t even have to drain the pool. “Suction from drains can be strong enough to hold an adult underwater,” Pollack says. “So it’s a nominal investment that can save a life.” She also recommends inspecting drain covers regularly to make sure that they aren’t broken or missing. And it’s worth educating kids to not swim near them or play with them.

Get Your Pool Inspected Regularly

You should have your pool inspected at least once a year by a licensed pool inspector, Pollack says, to ensure that drain covers are functioning properly and that lights in the pool aren’t posing any danger of electrical shock, which can lead to death by electrocution.

Pool equipment (pumps, filters, vacuums), lights, power or extension cords, overhead power lines, electrical outlets, radios, stereos and TVs are all sources of electricity around pools and spas, according to the CPSC.

If you’re in a swimming pool, signs that you’re experiencing an electrical shock include feeling a tingling sensation, experiencing muscle cramps or not being able to move. If you’re supervising swimmers, you may see unsettled or panicked behavior by others in the water, one or more motionless swimmers, or underwater lights not working properly, such as flickering or on when they shouldn’t be.

If you think you’re being shocked, the CPSC recommends that you move away from the source of the shock. Get out of the water but avoid using a metal ladder if one is present.

If you think someone is experiencing a shock, immediately turn off all power. Call or have someone call 911. The American Red Cross says you can also use a fiberglass shepherd’s rescue hook. For more information on electric shocks in swimming pools, you can review the safety guide from the CPSC.

Learn CPR

Knowing what to do should you find an unresponsive child or adult in a swimming pool or spa can be a life-or-death scenario. And while CPR generally is a good skill to have, if you’re a pool or spa owner, it’s vital. It’s another layer you can implement in addition to barriers, covers and alarms to help save a life. “You don’t know which method is going to work until it does,” Pollack says.

Get more expert advice on childproofing your home


Excerpts of this article are from Parker, M. (2018, May). These Steps Will Help Keep Kids Safe Around Pools and Spas. Retrieved from https://www.houzz.com

Previous
Previous

Worried about termites in Phoenix? You should be!